Improving Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment for Gender Minority Populations
改善性别少数人群的酒精使用障碍治疗
基本信息
- 批准号:10457332
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 18.79万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2020
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2020-08-01 至 2025-07-31
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:AcademyAddressAdultAffectAlcohol consumptionAlcoholsAreaAwardBehavioral ModelBiometryBirthCaringChildClinicalClinical InvestigatorClinical TreatmentClinical TrialsCultural SensitivityDataData AnalysesDiscriminationDistressDivorceDrug Use DisorderDrug usageEffectivenessEnsureEpidemiologyFamilyFriendsFrightGenderGender IdentityGeneral PopulationGoalsGrantHealthHeavy DrinkingHeterosexualsHormonalIndividualInterpersonal RelationsInterventionInterviewLife ExperienceLongitudinal cohortMediatingMedicineMentorshipMethodologyMethodsMinority GroupsOperative Surgical ProceduresPatientsPersonsPhysiciansPopulationPopulation InterventionPrevalencePreventionProcessPsychotherapyQualitative ResearchRandomizedReportingResearchResearch PersonnelRisk FactorsRoleScientistSex DifferencesSex DiscriminationSexual and Gender MinoritiesSiteSocial supportStigmatizationStructureSubstance Use DisorderTherapeutic StudiesTrainingUnited States National Institutes of HealthValue of LifeViolenceWritingaddictionalcohol abuse therapyalcohol interventionalcohol riskalcohol use disorderarmbasebinge drinkingcareercohortdrinkingefficacy trialevidence baseexperiencefeasibility trialgender minoritygender minority groupgender nonconforminggender transitionhazardous drinkinghealth disparityimprovedinnovationinterpersonal therapymaltreatmentmarginalized populationmembermotivational enhancement therapyneglectpeerpsychologicpsychological distresspsychosocialresiliencesexsocial stigmasubstance use treatmenttransgendertreatment programtreatment researchtreatment strategy
项目摘要
Project Summary: Gender minority individuals (GM; transgender and gender non-conforming), an NIH-
designated disparity population (NOT-MD-19-001), experience numerous health disparities including high rates
of hazardous drinking and alcohol use disorder (AUD). GMs also have culturally-distinct life experiences that can
further increase alcohol risk. Standard alcohol treatment programs often neglect such GM-specific experiences.
Cultural adaptation can improve treatment acceptability, retention, and effectiveness in minority populations by
increasing treatment compatibility with patients’ cultural norms/values. Despite alcohol disparities and unique
risk factors, there are no evidence-based alcohol interventions for this marginalized population.
In this application, Dr. Jeremy Kidd proposes a comprehensive path toward becoming an independent
physician-researcher of innovative treatments for alcohol and drug use disorders among GMs. Specifically, this
proposal follows the Stage Model of Behavioral Therapies Research to develop and evaluate the feasibility of a
culturally-adapted psychosocial intervention for AUD among GMs. Cultural adaptation will address the specific
types of interpersonal disruptions (e.g., with family, friends, coworkers) that many GMs experience due to gender
transition or anti-GM discrimination/stigma. These disruptions result in interpersonal distress that increases
alcohol risk. In Stage 0 formative research, Dr. Kidd will use latent class analysis to examine the relationship
between social support and trajectories of hazardous drinking in an established multi-site, longitudinal cohort of
GMs (N = 330). Next, he will employ qualitative descriptive methodologies to conduct individual semi-structured
interviews with cohort members (N = 48) to understand in-depth how interpersonal factors influence GM drinking.
He will use these formative findings to develop a culturally-adapted AUD intervention for GMs. He will use
interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) as a platform for adaptation because it is evidence-based for alleviating
interpersonally-mediated psychological distress. Finally, Dr. Kidd will evaluate this intervention’s feasibility by
delivering it to 20 GM individuals with AUD in a Stage 1 single-arm, pre-post, mixed-methods feasibility trial.
To further his long-term career goal of becoming an independent clinical researcher focused on GM addiction
disparities, Dr. Kidd will pursue training in the following 5 areas: (1) advanced epidemiology and biostatistics with
longitudinal and clinical trials data, (2) qualitative research, (3) psychosocial intervention adaptation, (4)
psychotherapy clinical trials, and (5) grant writing. The results of this study will be the first application of the Stage
Model of Behavioral Therapies Research in GM populations and the first evidence-based psychosocial alcohol
treatment for GMs. This approach may also inform clinical treatment research for other GM health disparities.
Overall, this award will ensure Dr. Kidd’s successful transition to an independent clinical investigator studying
prevention and treatment of substance use disorders in GM populations.
项目摘要:性别少数群体(GM;跨性别者和性别不合格者),NIH-
指定的差异人群 (NOT-MD-19-001),经历许多健康差异,包括高比率
危险饮酒和酒精使用障碍 (AUD) 的 GM 也具有不同文化的生活经历。
标准的酒精治疗方案常常忽视这种特定于转基因的经历。
文化适应可以通过以下方式提高少数群体的治疗可接受性、保留率和有效性:
尽管存在酒精差异和独特性,但仍提高治疗与患者文化规范/价值观的兼容性。
危险因素,目前还没有针对这一边缘人群的基于证据的酒精干预措施。
在此申请中,杰里米·基德 (Jeremy Kidd) 博士提出了一条成为独立人士的全面路径
GM 中酒精和药物使用障碍创新治疗的医生研究员。
提案遵循行为疗法研究的阶段模型来开发和评估可行性
GM 中针对 AUD 的文化适应心理社会干预 文化适应将解决具体问题。
许多总经理因性别而经历的人际干扰类型(例如,与家人、朋友、同事)
转型或反转基因歧视/耻辱会导致人际交往困难加剧。
在第 0 阶段形成性研究中,基德博士将使用潜在类别分析来检查这种关系。
在已建立的多地点纵向队列中,研究社会支持与危险饮酒轨迹之间的关系
接下来,他将采用定性描述方法来进行个人半结构化。
对队列成员 (N = 48) 进行访谈,以深入了解人际因素如何影响转基因饮酒。
他将利用这些形成性的发现为总经理制定适合文化的 AUD 干预措施。
人际心理治疗(IPT)作为适应平台,因为它是基于证据的缓解
最后,基德博士将通过以下方式评估这种干预措施的可行性。
在第一阶段单臂、前后、混合方法可行性试验中,将其以澳元交付给 20 名 GM 个人。
进一步推进他成为专注于转基因成瘾的独立临床研究员的长期职业目标
为了解决这种差异,Kidd 博士将在以下 5 个领域进行培训:(1) 高级流行病学和生物统计学
纵向和临床试验数据,(2) 定性研究,(3) 心理社会干预适应,(4)
心理治疗临床试验,以及(5)拨款写作 本研究的结果将是该阶段的首次申请。
转基因人群的行为治疗研究模型和第一个基于证据的心理社会酒精
这种方法也可以为其他转基因健康差异的临床治疗研究提供信息。
总体而言,该奖项将确保基德博士成功转型为独立临床研究者
预防和治疗转基因人群的物质使用障碍。
项目成果
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Jeremy D Kidd其他文献
Jeremy D Kidd的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Jeremy D Kidd', 18)}}的其他基金
Improving Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment for Gender Minority Populations
改善性别少数人群的酒精使用障碍治疗
- 批准号:
10674762 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 18.79万 - 项目类别:
Improving Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment for Gender Minority Populations
改善性别少数人群的酒精使用障碍治疗
- 批准号:
10224042 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 18.79万 - 项目类别:
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