Not Yet RecruitingPhase 1ACTRN12606000422527

Vietnam Veterans - Real Partners in Health: Does self-management support improve your health?

Research into the effects of the clinical application of the Flinders Model of chronic condition self-management on the health, psychosocial and quality of life outcomes of Vietnam Veterans with alcohol-related chronic conditions


Sponsor

Department of Veteran Affairs

Enrollment

200 participants

Start Date

Oct 1, 2006

Study Type

Interventional

Conditions

Summary

This project includes researching the benefits of applying a chronic disease management model to veterans with alcohol use issues. It will assess the effects of increasing self management (the Flinders model of chronic condition self management) for veterans who have alcohol related conditions compared to usual care. Alcohol use has been identified as a significant issue for the veteran community. It is reported that alcohol dependence is one of the four most common mental health disorders among veterans who have an accepted mental health disability. In addition, the level of co-morbidity between alcohol and other health problems among veterans, particularly mental health problems, is high. Methods for increasing self management and positive behaviour change in veterans with alcohol related conditions are needed. This will be a randomised control trial (50:50 randomisation) with measurement of repeated measures of quality of life in 160 patients. VV will be randomized either to Group A (Flinders group) or Group B (usual care group with a waiting list option to have the FM after nine months). a fifteen-month recruitment and intervention phase with a thirteen month follow up phase for between-group comparisons. Recruitment will be through the RGH, general practitioners in the Southern area, community health care centres, Vietnam Veterans Counselling Service (VVCS) and advertised through VV groups. Veterans will either be approached by their health professional or will volunteer themselves after hearing of the study.


Eligibility

Sex: Both males and females

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study tests whether a self-management support program can improve the health of Vietnam veterans who have alcohol-related chronic health conditions. Veterans of the Vietnam conflict with a score of 8 or above on the AUDIT alcohol screening test can participate in the program.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

Interested in this trial?

Get notified about updates and connect with the research team.

Interventions

The intervention group will receive "usual care" plus The Flinders Model of Chronic Condition Self-Management, together with any/all of the interventions listed, but agreed between a health profession

The intervention group will receive "usual care" plus The Flinders Model of Chronic Condition Self-Management, together with any/all of the interventions listed, but agreed between a health professional and the patient: Treatment options (based on the Alcohol Practice Guidelines) may include • Medical management using naltrexone (50mg tablets, orally, once per day, for an initial period of 3 months but may extend up to 9 months) or acamprosate (330mg x 2 tablets, orally, three times per day for an initial period of 3 months but may extend up to 9 months); • Self-management of alcohol problems using the web based program ‘the right mix’; www.therightmix.gov.au (duration: ongoing as needed by each individual); • Individual counselling using cognitive behaviour therapy based on motivational interviewing, cue exposure, cognitive restructuring and relapse prevention will be provided in the community through Drug and Alcohol Services SA (DASSA) and Vietnam Veterans Counselling Service (VVCS) (duration 30-90 minutes per session for as many sessions required by each individual); • Group therapy (Stanford six-week generic self-management course - 2 1/2 hours per one session per week). • “Drink Watchers: A self-monitoring approach” (duration: ongoing per individual, as needed); • Alcoholics Anonymous (duration approx 2 hours per session, once per week, for as many sessions as the Veteran requires). Each group will be offered the same treatment options during a nine month period which will be agreed between the participant, their GP and other health providers. One group will be supported in self-management techniques with the Flinders Model of self-management in the first nine months, with nine months follow-up, and the other group will be supported in self-management in the second nine months. Total intervention period 18 months.


Locations(1)

Australia

View Full Details on ANZCTR

For the most up-to-date information, visit the official listing.

Visit

ACTRN12606000422527