- Cucciare, Michael A;
- Hagedorn, Hildi J;
- Bounthavong, Mark;
- Abraham, Traci H;
- Greene, Carolyn J;
- Han, Xiaotong;
- Kemp, Lakiesha;
- Marchant, Kathy;
- White, Penny;
- Humphreys, Keith
Background
Long-term benzodiazepine dependence carries significant health risks which might be reduced with low-cost patient self-management interventions. A booklet version of one such intervention (Eliminating Medications Through Patient Ownership of End Results; EMPOWER) proved effective in a Canadian clinical trial with older adults. Digitizing such an intervention for electronic delivery and tailoring it to different populations could expand its reach. Accordingly, this article describes the protocol for a randomized controlled trial to test the effectiveness of an electronically-delivered, direct-to-patient benzodiazepine cessation intervention tailored to U.S. military veterans.Methods
Design: Two-arm individually randomized controlled trial.Setting
US Veterans Health Administration primary care clinics.Participants
Primary care patients taking benzodiazepines for three or more months and having access to a smartphone, tablet or desktop computer.Intervention and comparator
Participants will be randomized to receive either the electronically-delivered EMPOWER (EMPOWER-ED) protocol or asked to continue to follow provider recommendations regarding their benzodiazepine use (treatment-as-usual).Measurements
The primary outcomes are complete benzodiazepine cessation and 25% dose reduction, assessed using administrative and self-report data, between baseline and six-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes are self-reported anxiety symptoms, sleep quality, and overall health and quality of life, measured at baseline and 6-month follow-up, and benzodiazepine cessation at 12-month follow-up.Comments
This randomized controlled trial will evaluate whether the accessibility and effectiveness of a promising intervention for benzodiazepine cessation can be improved through digitization and population tailoring.