A Randomized Trial Comparing Brief Advice and Motivational Interviewing for Persons with HIV–HCV Co-infection Who Drink Alcohol

Alcohol use contributes to the progression of liver disease in HIV–HCV co-infected persons, but alcohol interventions have never addressed low levels of alcohol use in this population. We enrolled 110 persons consuming at least 4 alcoholic drinks weekly in a clinical trial comparing two active 18-mo...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS and behavior 2021-04, Vol.25 (4), p.1013-1025
Hauptverfasser: Stein, Michael D., Herman, Debra S., Kim, H. Nina, Howell, Abigail, Lambert, Audrey, Madden, Stephanie, Moitra, Ethan, Blevins, Claire E., Anderson, Bradley J., Taylor, Lynn E., Pinkston, Megan M.
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container_title AIDS and behavior
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creator Stein, Michael D.
Herman, Debra S.
Kim, H. Nina
Howell, Abigail
Lambert, Audrey
Madden, Stephanie
Moitra, Ethan
Blevins, Claire E.
Anderson, Bradley J.
Taylor, Lynn E.
Pinkston, Megan M.
description Alcohol use contributes to the progression of liver disease in HIV–HCV co-infected persons, but alcohol interventions have never addressed low levels of alcohol use in this population. We enrolled 110 persons consuming at least 4 alcoholic drinks weekly in a clinical trial comparing two active 18-month long interventions, delivered every 3 months by phone, brief advice about drinking versus a motivational intervention. Final assessment was at 24 months. MI had larger reductions in alcohol use days than the BA arm at all follow-up assessments. The treatment by time effect was not significant for days of drinking (p = 0.470), mean drinks per day (p = 0.155), or for the continuous FIB-4 index (p = 0.175). Drinking declined in both conditions from baseline, but given the small sample, we do not have sufficient data to make any conclusion that one treatment is superior to the other. Trial Registry Trial registered at clinicaltrials.gov; Clinical Trial NCT02316184.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10461-020-03062-2
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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Alcohol Drinking
Alcohol use
Alcoholic beverages
Clinical trials
Coinfection
Crisis Intervention
Drinking
Drinking behavior
Health Psychology
Health services
Hepatitis C - complications
Hepatitis C - prevention & control
HIV
HIV Infections - complications
HIV Infections - prevention & control
Human immunodeficiency virus
Humans
Infectious Diseases
Interviews
Liver diseases
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Motivation
Motivational Interviewing
NCT
NCT02316184
Original Paper
Public Health
title A Randomized Trial Comparing Brief Advice and Motivational Interviewing for Persons with HIV–HCV Co-infection Who Drink Alcohol
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