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Coordinated Care for Alcohol Problems
Sponsor: Sangath
Summary
Parallel group individually randomised controlled trial (RCT) with stratified (by severity of drinking problem) randomisation into intervention and control arms. Aim is to test the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of Coordinated Care for Alcohol Problems (CCAP) for the whole spectrum of drinking problems in primary care in Goa, India. Primary outcome is the drinking outcome of percentage days abstinent (PDA) at three months post randomisation. Secondary outcomes include drinking outcomes (PDA at six- and 12- months post-randomisation; percentage days heavy drinking (PDHD), intensity of drinking and remission) and drinking related outcomes (e.g., injuries, violence) at three-, six- and 12- months post- randomisation. Participants will include consenting adult (\>18 years) men with drinking problems attending Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs) and Community Healthcare Centres (CHCs) in Goa and have drinking problems defined as scoring \>8 on the Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test (AUDIT). CCAP is a multi-component evidence-informed complex intervention package for coordinating treatment for all levels of problem drinking (hazardous, harmful, dependent). For hazardous drinking, it includes Mobile based Brief Intervention Treatment (M-BIT), which is a mobile-messaging brief intervention delivered via WhatsApp over eight weeks using multimedia content including contextually relevant messages, images and videos. For harmful drinking, it includes Counselling for Alcohol Problems Plus (CAP+) which is Counselling for Alcohol Problems (CAP), an evidence-based brief psychological treatment, integrated with strategies to enhance treatment engagement (entry into and completion). For dependent drinking, it includes Community Orientated Treatment for Alcohol Dependence (CONTAD) which is supervised home-detoxification over a week followed by a psychological treatment to prevent relapse, both integrated with treatment engagement strategies. CAP+ and CONTAD will be delivered in the community by non-specialist health workers (NSHW).
Official title: Coordinated Care for Alcohol Problems (CCAP): a Randomised Controlled Trial From Goa, India
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
1022
Start Date
2026-01-01
Completion Date
2027-12-31
Last Updated
2025-12-03
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
CCAP
Hazardous drinking: The content of the intervention includes seven themes: health education, alcohol reduction, drinking and risk management, drinking alternatives, situational content, urge management, and relapse prevention. Participants will receive texts and video-based messages building their awareness about drinking and associated harms. Harmful drinking: CAP has three phases which are delivered in one to four sessions over six to eight weeks by NSHWs. Each session lasts between 30 to 45 minutes. The content is delivered through motivational interviewing with additional behavioural and cognitive components. CAP+ will include treatment engagement strategies integrated into CAP. Dependent drinking: Home detoxification will be supervised by a doctor and monitored by the NSHW and a designated carer (e.g. spouse) for the patient at their home-setting. The counselling sessions are delivered by NSHWs, over 4-8 weeks and lasting 30-60 minutes each.
Enhanced usual care
Hazardous drinking: An information sheet/brochure with information on alcohol consumption, associated risks, and tips to manage and reduce drinking. Harmful drinking: CAP psychological brief treatment delivered by trained NSHWs (described above in detail). Dependent drinking: Hospital-based detoxification delivered in secondary or tertiary care.