Funded Projects
Explore our currently funded projects. You may search with all three fields, then focus your results by applying any of the dropdown filters. After customizing your search, you may download results and even save your specific search for later.
Project # | Project Title | Research Focus Area | Research Program | Administering IC | Institution(s) | Investigator(s) | Location(s) | Year Awarded |
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3R61AT010604-01S1
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Behavioral Economics based stigma reduction intervention for low income, African American individuals with OUD | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE HEALTH SCI CTR | DEREFINKO, KAREN J | Memphis, TN | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Buprenorphine-naloxone is known to work for the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). However, despite its success in treating OUD, retention for these kinds of medication-assisted treatments (MATs) for OUD is notoriously low, having a dropout rate of approximately 50 percent within the first 6 months. One factor known to negatively impact a person?s adherence to treatment is stigma. This includes, not only stigma associated with having OUD, but also that of multiple stigmatized identities, including stigma associated with race. The goal of this supplement award is to decrease OUD- and race-related stigma in low income African American communities using a Behavioral Economics Stigma Reduction intervention that functions at the intrapersonal, interpersonal, and community levels. The investigators will work at the individual level to address stigma in untreated individuals who present with OUD at local community or faith organizations through stigma reduction counseling and tangible rewards for treatment uptake. To assess the interpersonal stigma, referred family members or support persons of these individuals will also be enrolled to receive stigma reduction and supportive skills counseling. Finally, a stigma reduction campaign will be developed and administered to the community via social media and billboards. Community members? substance use stigma will be compared before and after the campaign. |
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3R61AT010799-01S2
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Understanding How Peers Can Shift Stigma to Retain Low-Income, Minority Individuals in Opioid Treatment | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment | NCCIH | UNIV OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK | MAGIDSON, JESSICA F | College Park, MD | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Stigma is a key barrier to retention in medication-based treatment for opioid use disorder, particularly among low-income, minority individuals. Stigma that exists at multiple levels contributes to poor retention in care, including internalized and anticipated stigma at the individual level, as well as enacted stigma at the health care provider- and community levels. There is an urgent need to develop and evaluate innovative strategies to reduce stigma at these multiple levels among low-income, racial/ethnic minority individuals to improve engagement in care. One of the most promising strategies to reduce multiple intersecting stigmas simultaneously and improve engagement in care for low-income, minority individuals is through the use of peer recovery coaches (PRCs). PRCs, individuals who have gone through the recovery process themselves and are typically state-certified, have been shown to be more acceptable for engaging and retaining low-income, racial/ethnic minority patients in treatment compared to other health workers. However, scarce research has formally evaluated the effects of PRCs on stigma. This study will test how a PRC model can reduce multiple intersecting stigmas among low-income, racial/ethnic minority individuals to improve retention in methadone treatment. |
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3R61AT010800-02S1
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OUD Stigma Mechanisms in the Context of Buprenorphine Treatment | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment | NCCIH | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES | GLASNER-EDWARDS, SUZETTE V | Los Angeles, CA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Buprenorphine has been shown to be is an effective method for treating Opioid Use Disorder (OUD). However, despite its success, treatment retention rates are notoriously low ? about half of those seeking treatment will have dropped out within the first 6 months. One factor known to negatively impact treatment adherence is stigma. This stigma derives from not only being viewed as individuals with OUD, but even as individuals seeking medications for OUD as these medications often include other forms of opioids. Additionally, individuals with OUD often suffer from other conditions, including psychiatric illness, leading them to live with multiple stigmatized identities. This study will develop tools to assess stigma associated with OUD, seeking medical treatment for OUD, and mental health. This knowledge will then be used to adapt the parent award?s mobile Health intervention intended to overcome stigma barriers and increase adherence to buprenorphine treatment for OUD. |
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3R61AT010806-01S1
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Enhancing Exercise and Psychotherapy to Treat Comorbid Addiction | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Behavioral Research to Improve Medication-Based Treatment | NCCIH | CASE WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY | NOCK, NORA L. | Cleveland, OH | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Among the more than half-million adults entering addiction treatment for prescription opioid abuse every year, 50%-60% report co-morbid chronic pain, and 80% report that pain triggers relapse. Individualized/self-stigma among adults with substance abuse has been shown to lead to delayed recovery, increased relapse and reduced treatment-related attendance. Stigma may induce significant burden on patients with OUD and chronic pain and there may be unique characteristics of stigma for this population due to the overlap between medical treatment and substance abuse. Multiple sources of stigma may be imposed including internalized/self-stigma as well as intragroup/peer-to-peer (?horizontal?) stigma whereby peers impose stigma upon each other based on the type and severity of past drug use. Furthermore, stigma could be ?vertical? in that stigma may be enacted by health care providers or by treatment center staff. However, there is notably a lack of research and related assessment tools to measure these multidimensional facets of stigma, particularly in patients with OUD and chronic pain. The investigators will utilize a mixed-methods approach to evaluate internalized/self-stigma, anticipated/expected stigma and enacted stigma using existing standardized surveys, and to describe horizontal and vertical stigma in individuals with OUD and pain at multiple sites. In addition, the investigators will integrate the quantitative and qualitative information to help inform modifications to the psychotherapy component (I-STOP) of the parent award intervention, which would then also target multidimensional stigma in patients with OUD and chronic pain. |
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3U01DK123812-01S1
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Creating a multi-level intervention to reduce stigma for buprenorphine use for individuals with End Stage Kidney Disease and Chronic Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients | NIDDK | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | JHAMB, MANISHA | Pittsburgh, PA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Medications have proven to be effective for treating opioid use disorder (OUD). Increasing accessibility to buprenorphine provides an opportunity for many with OUD to benefit from its proven effectiveness. Adherence to medication-based treatments however is low, in part because of the stigma associated with use of this and other effective drugs and as such, leads to inadequate treatment and poor outcomes. This study aims to understand the effects of stigma on patient engagement, retention, and outcomes of buprenorphine treatment. Knowledge drawn from the HIV Stigma Theory and tools developed to reduce HIV associated stigma will be used to assess OUD stigma and to develop interventions to reduce it in the context of buprenorphine treatment. The study findings may provide resources to address stigma and thus maximize treatment adherence among those affected by OUD. |
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3UG1DA040316-06S4
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NorthStar Node of the Clinical Trials Network-Bring two lines of research together to help primary care clinicians (PCCs) recognize and address increased risk of suicide for people at elevated risk of opioid use disorder (OUD) | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids | NIDA | HENNEPIN HEALTHCARE RESEARCH INSTITUTE | BART, GAVIN | Minneapolis, MN | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Increasing primary care clinician intention and behavior to obtain waivers to prescribe buprenorphine for treatment of opioid use disorder and increase use of the Opioid Wizard, a clinical decision support tool, has potential for patient benefit. This supplement will provide support to evaluate a training tool as an intervention to reduce stigma in primary care clinics by integrating a stigma reduction training component into the Opioid Wizard training at multiple sites of the NIDA Clinical Trial Network. Primary care providers will be randomized to novel stigma reduction training, grounded in stigma science, or an attention-control training to determine whether stigma reduction training reduces provider stigma, increases intention to apply for a waiver to prescribe buprenorphine, and ultimately increase the likelihood that providers use Opioid Wizard. The proposed supplement will utilize the randomized controlled trial design embedded in the larger multisite trial to evaluate the Opioid Wizard tool to help primary care clinicians identify, diagnose, and treat patients with opioid use disorder while evaluating the effect of the stigma reduction training. |
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3UG1DA049436-02S2
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Developing an intervention to address intersecting prescription opioid and chronic pain stigma in cancer survivors | Translation of Research to Practice for the Treatment of Opioid Addiction | Enhancing the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network to Address Opioids | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | LIEBSCHUTZ, JANE M. | Pittsburgh, PA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: While advances in cancer treatment have increased survival rates, these patients often suffer from chronic cancer pain. Prescription opioids are often prescribed during active cancer treatment, but their long-term use for chronic cancer pain is associated with risk for opioid use disorder and risk for stigmatization associated with emotional distress, suboptimal health behaviors and coping strategies, and difficult patient-provider communication. This study aims to conduct qualitative interviews exploring prescription opioid and chronic pain stigma in cancer survivors with moderate-to-severe pain, caregivers, and clinicians who treat patients with chronic cancer pain, including oncologists, primary care providers, pain management specialists, and palliative care physicians. An analysis of potential contributors to stigma in cancer survivors will be completed to support development of multi-level behavioral interventions to reduce stigma and explore long-term health outcomes from such interventions. |
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3UH3AR076568-02S1
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Examining the effect of intersectional stigma on the treatment of negative affect in chronic low back pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Back Pain Consortium Research Program | NIAMS | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | WASAN, AJAY D | Pittsburgh, PA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: HEAL Initiative: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI) regarding the Availability of Administrative Supplements to Support Strategies to Reduce Stigma in Pain Management and Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and Treatment
NOFO Number: NOT-OD-20-101 Summary: Patients with chronic low back pain, often have depressive and anxiety symptoms and use opioids all of which are associated with stigma. In turn stigma leads to decreased treatment seeking and adherence, increased depression and pain, and poor treatment outcomes. Intersection of these health-related stigmas may have synergistic effects. This study aims to enhance the findings of a clinical trial to test antidepressant medication and Enhanced Fear Avoidance Rehabilitation in patients with chronic low back pain and high levels of depression and anxiety. The effects of these intersecting types of stigma on the efficacy of the interventions will be evaluated to better understand the needs of the patient population and to inform development of a stigma reducing intervention that can be implemented care providers. |
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3U01DK123787-01S1
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University of Illinois at Chicago Hemodialysis Opioid Prescription Effort (HOPE) Clinical Center | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Integrated Approach to Pain and Opioid Use in Hemodialysis Patients | NIDDK | UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT CHICAGO | FISCHER, MICHAEL J. | Chicago, IL | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: It is increasingly clear that the microbiome influences psychoneurological symptoms, including pain. This project will support clinical research training focused on examining the relationship between the composition and function of the gut microbiome, including the symbiotic bacteria residing in the gut and their functional gene content, and chronic pain among adults with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD). It provides an opportunity for the trainee to expand his skill set as a pain investigator, through experience in implementing and evaluating pain management interventions in adults with ESKD and chronic pain receiving maintenance hemodialysis. The project aims to determine the acceptability of collecting feces and the feasibility of fecal data collection procedure to determine the best strategies for recruiting research participants from multiple dialysis facilities. These steps will allow the exploration of gene content of the gut microbiota and short-chain fatty acids among people with ESKD on maintenance hemodialysis before and after pain management interventions. |
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3U19AR076725-01S1
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HEALing LB3P: Profiling Biomechanical, Biological and Behavioral phenotypes | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Back Pain Consortium Research Program | NIAMS | UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH AT PITTSBURGH | SOWA, GWENDOLYN A | Pittsburgh, PA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: Multiple factors, including inflammation contribute to chronic low back pain. Inflammation is mediated by numerous genes. The study aims to determine how variations in the genes encoding key inflammatory mediators impact the response of patients with chronic low back pain to physical therapy treatment. Gene variations that are known to be linked to inflammation and pain will be tested against their possible association on physical therapy treatment outcomes, to inform clinical decisions on optimal care. This study will support training in clinical research on pain within the context of the HEAL BACPAC Mechanistic Research Center. It will provide resources for a research project relevant to the parent grant and the career development of an individual in the field of pain research. The ability to identify a set of genetic variations and classify patients according to treatment response might enable use of DNA testing as a screening tool for targeted treatments for patients with CLBP. |
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3U19AR076734-01S1
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University of Michigan BACPAC Mechanistic Research Center | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Back Pain Consortium Research Program | NIAMS | UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBOR | CLAUW, DANIEL J | Ann Arbor, MI | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: There are numerous non-pharmacological interventions for chronic low back pain, yet no treatment is invariably effective for all. Understanding patient characteristics that predict differential responses to these non-pharmacological interventions will allow for tailored treatments to maximize positive patient impact. This supplement supports a training experience for an individual in clinical pain research, including exploring differential response to psychotherapeutic interventions. The aim of the project is to provide an extensive systematic literature review examining baseline phenotypic factors that predict differential responsiveness to the some of the most commonly used psychotherapeutic interventions for chronic low back pain. |
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3U19AR076737-01S1
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UCSF Core Center for Patient-centric Mechanistic Phenotyping in Chronic Low Back Pain | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Back Pain Consortium Research Program | NIAMS | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO | LOTZ, JEFFREY C. | San Francisco, CA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: Chronic low back pain is difficult to diagnose and treat effectively in part, because of the interplay of biophysical and psychosocial influences that complicate the relationship between impairment, disability, and pain. Psychological factors such as fear of movement and catastrophyzing can lead to compensatory movement patterns that affect movement biomechanics and paraspinal structure and function, driving further impairment, disrupting the balance between passive and active spine stabilizers, and reinforcing the patient?s perceived disability status. This study will support research to determine how psychological factors, spinal pathology, and perception of pain severity and disability status influence compensatory movement strategies, how movement biomechanics, psychological factors, and pain mechanisms relate to paraspinal muscle quality, and their relative changes during treatment. The supplement will provide training opportunities for skills in clinical pain management research. |
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3U24NS113849-01S1
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The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS) EPPIC-Net Specialized Clinical Center | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Early Phase Pain Investigation Clinical Network (EPPIC-Net) | NINDS | ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI | ROBINSON-PAPP, JESSICA | New York, NY | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: Exacerbation of health disparities has emerged during the COVID 19 pandemic and highlighted the recognition that minority underrepresentation in clinical research may contribute to racial disparities in health outcomes. In clinical trials related to pain, disparities in trial patient inclusion are documented by white patients often being overrepresented. Mitigating these disparities is an area in which an early-career pain investigator training and contributions may have lasting benefits. The pandemic also drove rapid expansion of telehealth for pain management without knowledge of how social and demographic factors affect utilization patterns of this care delivery model. This supplement supports research to examine the extent to which disparities exist in access to and outcomes of telehealth in socially marginalized pain patients. Findings will be applied to enrich the diversity in clinical trial populations for phase 2 safety trials performed in the HEAL EPPIC Network. |
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3UG1CA189824-07S2
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Wake Forest NCORP Research Base | Clinical Research in Pain Management | Pain Management Effectiveness Research Network (ERN) | NCATS | WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES | LESSER, GLENN J | Winston-Salem, NC | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest to Encourage Eligible NIH HEAL Initiative Awardees to Apply for Administrative Supplements to Promote Training in Clinical Research on Pain (Admin Supp ? Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
NOFO Number: NOT-NS-20-044 Summary: Pain is one of the most common symptoms in cancer patients and one least likely to be adequately treated. It is particularly common in advanced cancer, affecting an estimated 64% of patients with advanced disease. Pain treatment guidelines state patients should have access to behavioral pain interventions that educate them about pain and teach them skills for managing it. The parent grant will evaluate the effectiveness of an evidence based pain management intervention called ?Pain Coping Skills Training? in a web based format for patients with advanced cancer. This supplement will provide support for a training opportunity that aligns with the goals of the parent grant and includes community outreach and engaging underserved populations in clinical research. |
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3UH3DA050235-02S1
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Development and Implementation of a Culturally Centered Opioid Prevention Intervention for American Indian/Alaska Native Young Adults in California | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Preventing Opioid Use Disorder | NIDA | RAND CORPORATION | D'AMICO, ELIZABETH | Santa Monica, CA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033 Summary: Data from 2015 show that American Indian/Alaska Natives (AI/AN) have the highest rates of diagnosis for opioid use disorders (OUD) and deaths from drug overdose; yet, there are no prevention programs addressing opioid misuse among urban AI/AN young adults that integrate culturally-appropriate strategies with evidence-based treatment. This project proposes to address that gap and help prevent OUD in Older Adolescents and Young Adults (ages 16-30) by developing and implementing a culturally-centered intervention to address opioid misuse among urban AI/AN emerging adults in California. The study will examine outcomes at 3-, 6-, and 12- months, and explore potential mechanisms of change for decreases in opioid and alcohol and other drug use outcomes through mediation analyses, including changes in social networks and cultural connectedness. Results from this study could significantly advance scientific knowledge and clinical practice for AI/AN emerging adults. |
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3R37DA047926-02S1
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Social networks of young American Indian adolescents and their parents:Characteristics, connections, and response to intervention | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Preventing Opioid Use Disorder | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER | WHITESELL, NANCY RUMBAUGH | Aurora, CO | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033 |
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3R01MH115840-02S1
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Social Networks among Native American caregivers participating in an evidence-based and culturally informed intergenerational intervention | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Preventing Opioid Use Disorder | NIMH | JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY | BROCKIE, TERESA | Baltimore, MD | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033 Summary: American Native (AN) communities experience high rates of trauma that compromise the mental health of parents and caregivers that in turn increases their children?s risk for suicide and substance use during adolescence and young adulthood. Without intervention, this intergenerational cycle may repeat. The goal of this study is to understand opioid use, suicide, and the social network characteristics of Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux parents and caregivers to determine how the social network of parents/adult caregivers are related to both risk for and protection from suicide and opioid use. This supplement will examine the effectiveness of a community health worker delivered, culturally tailored prevention intervention called Wa?Kan Ye?Zah on caregiver and child behavioral and mental health outcomes and assess the benefits of culturally enhancing the intervention for caregivers? well-being. |
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3U19MH113135-04S1
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Social Connectedness and Behavioral Health Risks Among AI/AN Urban Adults | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Preventing Opioid Use Disorder | NIMH | UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER | MANSON, SPERO MARTIN | Aurora, CO | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033 Summary: American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) youth and young adults experience disproportionately high rates of suicide, mental health disorders, traumatic life events, and substance use disorder. More effective, culturally informed interventions are needed that are tailored to the specific needs of this population. This supplement will examine how a person?s social network contributes to their behavioral health (suicide risk, mental health, substance use) status and how this network can be leveraged to improve the uptake of prevention interventions. The long-term goal is to disseminate and translate the lessons learned into practical policy, organizational changes, and preventive innovations that optimize patient-centered health outcomes and ultimately reduce or eliminate the dramatic and tragic suicide-related health disparities among urban AI/AN YYAs. |
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3R61DA049382-02S2
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The moderation effect of social support networks on the relationship between opioid use and suicide attempts among Native American youth in New Mexico | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Preventing Opioid Use Disorder | NIDA | UNIVERSITY OF UTAH | QEADAN, FARES | Salt Lake City, UT | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest(NOSI): HEAL Initiative: Social Network Analyses to Reduce American Indian and Alaska Native Opioid Use Disorder and Related Risks for Suicide and Mental Health Disorders
NOFO Number: NOT-DA-20-033 Summary: Fatal opioid overdose rates are higher among American Indian/Alaska Native populations than among Hispanics, African Americans, and Asian Americans, and are just below non-Hispanic Whites. AI/AN opioid overdose rates vary significantly by state and county; however, tribe-level differences are difficult to ascertain due to decentralized data systems that divide state health data and Indian Health Service data. This study will conduct a two-phase research project that leverages Center for Disease Control funding awarded to the Albuquerque Area Southwest Tribal Epidemiology Center for improving data quality in opioid overdose surveillance in New Mexico. In the first phase, geocoding and data linkages will be studied to address the need in New Mexico for tribe-specific data and analyses on opioid use disorder and opioid overdose. After disseminating analyses to tribal communities and Indian Health Service, Tribal and Urban Indian health facilities, the second phase of the study will establish a collaboration with interested tribes and facilities in a community-based participatory intervention research project to develop and test a culturally centered implementation program for providing medication for opioid use disorders to American Indian people. |
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3UG3DA050325-02S1
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Use of a GLP-1 Agonist to Treat Opioid Use Disorder in Rats and Man | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Sleep Dysfunction as a Core Feature of Opioid Use Disorder and Recovery | NIDA | PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIV HERSHEY MED CTR | GRIGSON, PATRICIA SUE ; BUNCE, SCOTT C | Hershey, PA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI): NHLBI and NIDA Announce Availability of Administrative Supplements for HEAL Awardees to Address Sleep Impairments in OUD Treatment Response and Recovery Outcomes
NOFO Number: NOT-HL-20-746 Summary: Opioid use disorder, a chronic and relapsing disease, is a significant and escalating public health concern. But, despite the availability of approved pharmacotherapies and promising therapeutic interventions, the high rates of relapse indicate a critical need for a better understanding of the factors that contribute to relapse to opioids, and for the development of new treatment approaches. Sleep problems are a common symptom in most substance use disorder syndromes, including opioid use disorder (OUD), but they are severely undertreated, partly because the standard hypnotic medications used to treat sleep disorders are themselves addictive. This study will investigate whether activating the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor pathway can help reduce craving while improving sleep in OUD patients. The FDA-approved medication liraglutide, a GLP-1R agonist, is currently approved to treat Type II diabetes mellitus and obesity in humans. This proposal for a supplemental study will add polysomnography, the gold-standard for evaluating sleep architecture, to an ongoing study. If successful, this study will provide a strong rationale for conducting a full multi-site, Phase III clinical trial. |
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3UG1DA050072-02S2
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Transitions Clinic Network: Post Incarceration Addiction Treatment, Healthcare, and Social Support (TCN PATHS) study | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Sleep Dysfunction as a Core Feature of Opioid Use Disorder and Recovery | NIDA | YALE UNIVERSITY | Wang, Emily Ai-hua | New Haven, CT | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest (NOSI): NHLBI and NIDA Announce Availability of Administrative Supplements for HEAL Awardees to Address Sleep Impairments in OUD Treatment Response and Recovery Outcomes
NOFO Number: NOT-HL-20-746 Summary: All forms of sleep deficiency can affect OUD treatment engagement and retention among people with OUD, particularly among people recently released from jail. Sleep deficiency may lead to a wide range of physical and psychological perturbations that may increase the likelihood of illicit opioid use, and disengagement in OUD treatment. This study will examine the association between sleep deficiency and OUD treatment retention in a sample of people receiving medications for OUD who were recently released from jail, to reduce morbidity and mortality from OUD among justice-involved individuals. The underlying rationale for this study is that sleep deficiency must be addressed in a holistic manner to support OUD treatment engagement. The specific aims are to 1) determine the prevalence of sleep deficiency and describe the sleep environment of a sample of people on MOUD recently released from jail; 2) estimate the association between sleep deficiency and OUD treatment retention; and 3) examine sleep environment as a potential mediator of sleep deficiency and OUD treatment retention in people recently released from jail. If successful, this study will provide data for the future development and testing of patient-centered interventions focusing on sleep deficiency among OUD treatment participants that enhance their retention in treatment |
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3U19MH121738-02S2
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Buprenorphine Effect on Suicidal Behavior | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions | NIMH | KAISER FOUNDATION RESEARCH INSTITUTE | SIMON, GREGORY E | Oakland, CA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest: HEAL Supplements to Improve the Treatment and Management of Common Co-occurring Conditions and Suicide Risk in People Affected by the Opioid Crisis
NOFO Number: NOT-MH-20-025 Summary: Mortality and morbidity related to suicidal behavior and opioid use disorder (OUD) have increased significantly over the past decade. These two public health crises are intertwined at multiple levels. Medications for OUD, especially buprenorphine, have been shown to decrease opioid use and reduce the multiple negative consequences of OUD, including fatal and nonfatal overdose, criminal justice involvement, infectious complications, and misuse of other substances. In addition, small randomized trials of buprenorphine treatment in treatment-resistant depression (with or without co-occurring OUD) suggest that buprenorphine reduces depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation. This large study will evaluate the effects of starting buprenorphine treatment on self-harm and suicide attempt among people with opioid use disorder, including those with and without co-occurring mental health conditions or other known risk factors for suicidal behavior. Comprehensive health records data from four large health systems serving a combined member/patient population of approximately 11 million will be examined for the overall effect of buprenorphine treatment on subsequent self-harm or suicide attempt, including differences in effects between patient subgroups and specificity of effects to buprenorphine vs other medications. |
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3U01MH114087-02S1
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Patient perspectives on clinical approaches to prevent opioid related suicide attempts | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions | NIMH | Henry Ford Health System | AHMEDANI, BRIAN KENNETH | Detroit, MI | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest: HEAL Supplements to Improve the Treatment and Management of Common Co-occurring Conditions and Suicide Risk in People Affected by the Opioid Crisis
NOFO Number: NOT-MH-20-025 Summary: This study will evaluate the implementation of the Zero Suicide framework across six health systems serving over nine million people in collaboration with the Mental Health Research Network. The project will incorporate the voice of the patient and provider stakeholders as part of the implementation of the Zero Suicide framework in three health settings from the NIMH-funded parent award as well as the Southcentral Foundation which is an Alaska Native-owned, nonprofit health care organization serving nearly 65,000 American Indian/Alaskan Native people living in and around Anchorage, Alaska. The team will first systematically engage patients, providers, national consumer advocacy groups, and MHRN scientists in formulating research questions to address the prevention of opioid-related overdoses in people with Opioid Use Disorders (OUD) or people without diagnosed OUD who are using opioids for pain management. Next, the team will utilize semi-structured interviews to determine how people with OUD or people without diagnosed OUD who are using opioids for pain management are experiencing the implementation of the Zero Suicide framework in four diverse health systems. Experiences will be recorded using 80 semi-structured phone interviews in a diverse sample of patients who have survived an opioid-related overdose (50% intentional; 50% unintentional), as well as 20 Addiction Medicine, Primary Care, and/or Specialty Pain Medicine providers. |
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3UG1DA040316-06S3
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Suicide Prediction and Prevention for People at Risk for Opioid Use Disorder | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions | NIDA | HENNEPIN HEALTHCARE RESEARCH INSTITUTE | BART, GAVIN ; ROSSOM, REBECCA CLARE | Minneapolis, MN | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest: HEAL Supplements to Improve the Treatment and Management of Common Co-occurring Conditions and Suicide Risk in People Affected by the Opioid Crisis
NOFO Number: NOT-MH-20-025 Summary: People with opioid use disorder (OUD) are at increased risk of depression and other mental health conditions, and a significant proportion of opioid-related deaths are likely suicides. Nearly 50% of patients who die by suicide make a healthcare visit in the month prior, most often to primary care. Yet systematic screening of patients with OUD for suicide risk is rarely done. Clinical decision support tools within the electronic health record can improve healthcare prevention measures and important clinical outcomes. This primary care-based clinic-randomized trial will integrate a clinical decision support tool for suicide risk prediction with a clinical decision support tool for the identification, diagnosis, and treatment of opioid use disorder. By integrating these two tools, the study will identify patients with opioid use disorder who have increased risk for suicide, ultimately increasing engagement in both OUD treatment and outpatient mental health care |
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3UF1MH121954-01S1
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Improving Access and Treatment for Co-occurring Opioid Use Disorders and Mental Illness | New Strategies to Prevent and Treat Opioid Addiction | Optimizing Care for People with Opioid Use Disorder and Mental Health Conditions | NIMH | RAND CORPORATION | WATKINS, KATHERINE E (contact); KOMAROMY, MIRIAM | Santa Monica, CA | 2020 |
NOFO Title: Notice of Special Interest: HEAL Supplements to Improve the Treatment and Management of Common Co-occurring Conditions and Suicide Risk in People Affected by the Opioid Crisis
NOFO Number: NOT-MH-20-025 Summary: The United States is in the middle of two intertwined epidemics. Suicide and overdose deaths are at record levels. Opioid use disorder and mental illness are major contributors to both, with the highest death rates seen in people with co-occurring disorders (COD). This competitive revision tests whether enhancements to the collaborative care (CC) model adapted for co-occurring disorders improves retention in medication treatment and decreases suicide and overdose risk. The three additional components include: (1) education of family members about addiction and medication treatment; (2) training for family members to administer naloxone and on how to reduce opioid risk behaviors, and (3) implementation of Caring Contacts, a suicide prevention intervention. This study will examine patient and family member attitudes toward overdose education and naloxone in the population with COD; examine and then intervene with family members around patients? use of medication; and test in the COD population the effectiveness of universal suicide and overdose prevention programs. |