Testing a Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment Intervention Approach for Addressing Unhealthy Alcohol and Other Drug Use in Humanitarian Settings: Protocol of the Ukuundapwa Chapamo Randomised Controlled Trial

Jeremy Kane, Muzi Kamanga,Stephanie Skavenski,Laura Murray, Mbaita Shawa, Bertha Bwalya,Kristina Metz,Ravi Paul,Namuchana Mushabati,Peter Ventevogel,Stephanie Haddad, Grace Kilbane,Megan Sienkiewicz, Veronica Chibemba, Princess Chiluba, Nkumbu Mtongo, Mildred Chibwe,Caleb Figge,Michelle Alto, David Mwanza, Elizabeth Mupinde, Shira Kakumbi,Wietse Tol, Kelsey Vaughan, Zaliwe Banda,Anja Busse,Nadine Ezard,Allan Zulu, Henry Loongo,M. Greene

INTERVENTION-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH PSYCHOSOCIAL WORK AND COUNSELLING IN AREAS OF ARMED CONFLICT(2023)

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摘要
Refugees and other displaced persons are exposed to many risk factors for unhealthy alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and concomitant mental health problems. Evidence-based services for AOD use and mental health comorbidities are rarely available in humanitarian settings. In high income countries, screening, brief intervention and referral to treatment (SBIRT) systems can provide appropriate care for AOD use but have rarely been used in low- and middle-income countries and to our knowledge never tested in a humanitarian setting. This paper describes the protocol for a randomised controlled trial to compare the effectiveness of an SBIRT system featuring the Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) to treatment as usual in reducing unhealthy AOD use and mental health comorbidities among refugees from the Democratic Republic of the Congo and host community members in an integrated settlement in northern Zambia. The trial is an individually randomised, single-blind, parallel design with outcomes assessed at 6-months (primary) and 12-months post-baseline. Participants are Congolese refugees and Zambians in the host community, 15 years of age or older with unhealthy alcohol use. Outcomes are: unhealthy alcohol use (primary), other drug use, depression, anxiety and traumatic stress. The trial will explore SBIRT acceptability, appropriateness, cost-effectiveness, feasibility, and reach.
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alcohol use,brief intervention,CETA,humanitarian settings,randomised controlled trial,refugees,SBIRT,substance use,transdiagnostic therapy,unhealthy alcohol use,Zambia
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