Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence

A strong body of evidence guides clinical responses to alcohol and tobacco dependence and there is an emerging evidence base informing responses to cannabis dependence. Nevertheless, there are still important gaps in the evidence base. Approach. Three researchers, with backgrounds in alcohol, tobacc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Allsop, Steve, Carter, Owen, Lenton, Simon
Format: Journal Article
Published: Informa Healthcare 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22254
_version_ 1848750819250274304
author Allsop, Steve
Carter, Owen
Lenton, Simon
author_facet Allsop, Steve
Carter, Owen
Lenton, Simon
author_sort Allsop, Steve
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description A strong body of evidence guides clinical responses to alcohol and tobacco dependence and there is an emerging evidence base informing responses to cannabis dependence. Nevertheless, there are still important gaps in the evidence base. Approach. Three researchers, with backgrounds in alcohol, tobacco and cannabis research examine current clinical research and practice to identify potential future priorities for clinical research. Key Findings. Clinical outcomes will be improved by research that enhances engagement and retention of a broader range of consumers, especially underrepresented and disadvantaged populations who may not respond as well to mainstream interventions. Research might focus on innovative client recruitment approaches, varying treatment intensity, use of new technology and assertive outreach. Assessment of treatment outcome will be enhanced by strategies that facilitate longer-term follow up of participants, adoption of shared measures of non-abstinent outcomes and extending the focus and outcome measures beyond drug use.Translation of research into clinical strategies will be enhanced by improving links between theory and interventions, increased attention on factors that influence treatment fidelity, designing treatment studies that are relevant to a variety of clinical settings, focussing on clinician characteristics as treatment variables and developing methodologies that address the capacity of participants to discriminate between placebo and pharmacotherapy. Implications. A range of future research priorities have been identified that have the potential to better engage and retain clients in a range of treatment settings and enhance translation of research findings into improved treatment outcomes.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:42:53Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-22254
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:42:53Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Informa Healthcare
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-222542017-09-13T15:58:57Z Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence Allsop, Steve Carter, Owen Lenton, Simon A strong body of evidence guides clinical responses to alcohol and tobacco dependence and there is an emerging evidence base informing responses to cannabis dependence. Nevertheless, there are still important gaps in the evidence base. Approach. Three researchers, with backgrounds in alcohol, tobacco and cannabis research examine current clinical research and practice to identify potential future priorities for clinical research. Key Findings. Clinical outcomes will be improved by research that enhances engagement and retention of a broader range of consumers, especially underrepresented and disadvantaged populations who may not respond as well to mainstream interventions. Research might focus on innovative client recruitment approaches, varying treatment intensity, use of new technology and assertive outreach. Assessment of treatment outcome will be enhanced by strategies that facilitate longer-term follow up of participants, adoption of shared measures of non-abstinent outcomes and extending the focus and outcome measures beyond drug use.Translation of research into clinical strategies will be enhanced by improving links between theory and interventions, increased attention on factors that influence treatment fidelity, designing treatment studies that are relevant to a variety of clinical settings, focussing on clinician characteristics as treatment variables and developing methodologies that address the capacity of participants to discriminate between placebo and pharmacotherapy. Implications. A range of future research priorities have been identified that have the potential to better engage and retain clients in a range of treatment settings and enhance translation of research findings into improved treatment outcomes. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22254 10.1111/j.1465-3362.2010.00171.x Informa Healthcare unknown
spellingShingle Allsop, Steve
Carter, Owen
Lenton, Simon
Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title_full Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title_fullStr Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title_short Enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
title_sort enhancing clinical research with alcohol, tobacco and cannabis problems and dependence
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22254