7 results on '"Berking, Matthias"'
Search Results
2. Nutzung von Anschlussmaßnahmen nach stationärem Alkoholentzug: Annahmen zum Stand der Vernetzung im deutschen Suchthilfesystem.
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Reichl, Daniela, Enewoldsen, Niklas, Tegethoff, Paulina, Gendlina, Taisia, Saur, Sebastian, Lang, Catharina, Fuhrmann, Lukas, Weisel, Kiona K., Berking, Matthias, Zink, Mathias, Ahnert, Andreas, Falkai, Peter, Kraus, Thomas, Hillemacher, Thomas, Müller, Felix-Nicolai, Kornhuber, Johannes, Bönsch, Dominikus, Achtert, Katharina, and Steins-Loeber, Sabine
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TERMINATION of treatment ,PATIENT aftercare ,SUPPORT groups ,MEDICAL care ,ALCOHOL ,CURRICULUM ,REHABILITATION - Abstract
Copyright of Sucht is the property of Hogrefe AG and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2023
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3. Efficacy of a web‐based intervention with and without guidance for employees with risky drinking: results of a three‐arm randomized controlled trial
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Boß, Leif, Lehr, Dirk, Schaub, Michael Patrick, Paz Castro, Raquel, Riper, Heleen, Berking, Matthias, and Ebert, David Daniel
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Research Report ,Adult ,Employment ,Male ,Internet ,training ,employee ,treatment ,Mentoring ,Research Reports ,drinking ,Motivational Interviewing ,Middle Aged ,Feedback ,Self-Control ,Alcoholism ,Therapy, Computer-Assisted ,occupational health ,Humans ,Female ,Alcohol ,Goals ,mental health ,Problem Solving - Abstract
Aims To test the efficacy of a web‐based alcohol intervention with and without guidance. Design Three parallel groups with primary end‐point after 6 weeks. Setting Open recruitment in the German working population. Participants Adults (178 males/256 females, mean age 47 years) consuming at least 21/14 weekly standard units of alcohol (SUA) and scoring ≥ 8/6 on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. Intervention Five web‐based modules including personalized normative feedback, motivational interviewing, goal setting, problem‐solving and emotion regulation during 5 weeks. One intervention group received an unguided self‐help version (n=146) and the second received additional adherence‐focused guidance by eCoaches (n=144). Controls were on a waiting list with full access to usual care (n=144). Measurements Primary outcome was weekly consumed SUA after 6 weeks. SUA after 6 months was examined as secondary outcome, next to numbers of participants drinking within the low‐risk range, and general and work‐specific mental health measures. Findings All groups showed reductions of mean weekly SUA after 6 weeks (unguided: −8.0; guided: −8.5; control: −3.2). There was no significant difference between the unguided and guided intervention (P=0.324). Participants in the combined intervention group reported significantly fewer SUA than controls [B=−4.85, 95% confidence interval (CI)=−7.02 to −2.68, P
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- 2017
4. Efficacy of a web-based intervention with and without guidance for employees with risky drinking:Results of a three-arm randomized controlled trial
- Author
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Boß, Leif, Lehr, Dirk, Schaub, Michael Patrick, Paz Castro, Raquel, Riper, Heleen, Berking, Matthias, Ebert, David Daniel, Clinical Psychology, APH - Global Health, APH - Mental Health, Clinical, Neuro- & Developmental Psychology, University of Zurich, Boß, Leif, and Psychiatry
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Internet ,training ,employee ,treatment ,Occupational health ,Drinking ,610 Medicine & health ,2701 Medicine (miscellaneous) ,drinking ,Treatment ,2738 Psychiatry and Mental Health ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,occupational health ,Training ,Psychology ,10075 Swiss Research Institute for Public Health and Addiction ,Employee ,Mental health ,internet ,Alcohol ,mental health - Abstract
Aims: To test the efficacy of a web-based alcohol intervention with and without guidance. Design: Three parallel groups with primary end-point after 6 weeks. Setting: Open recruitment in the German working population. Participants: Adults (178 males/256 females, mean age 47 years) consuming at least 21/14 weekly standard units of alcohol (SUA) and scoring ≥ 8/6 on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. Intervention: Five web-based modules including personalized normative feedback, motivational interviewing, goal setting, problem-solving and emotion regulation during 5 weeks. One intervention group received an unguided self-help version (n=146) and the second received additional adherence-focused guidance by eCoaches (n=144). Controls were on a waiting list with full access to usual care (n=144). Measurements: Primary outcome was weekly consumed SUA after 6 weeks. SUA after 6 months was examined as secondary outcome, next to numbers of participants drinking within the low-risk range, and general and work-specific mental health measures. Findings: All groups showed reductions of mean weekly SUA after 6 weeks (unguided: −8.0; guided: −8.5; control: −3.2). There was no significant difference between the unguided and guided intervention (P=0.324). Participants in the combined intervention group reported significantly fewer SUA than controls [B=−4.85, 95% confidence interval (CI)=−7.02 to −2.68, P
- Published
- 2018
5. Efficacy of a web‐based intervention with and without guidance for employees with risky drinking: results of a three‐arm randomized controlled trial.
- Author
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Boß, Leif, Lehr, Dirk, Schaub, Michael Patrick, Paz Castro, Raquel, Riper, Heleen, Berking, Matthias, and Ebert, David Daniel
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ALCOHOLISM treatment ,ONLINE education ,EMPLOYEES -- Alcohol use ,EMPLOYEE medical care ,INDUSTRIAL hygiene ,COMPUTER network resources ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,COUNSELING ,ALCOHOL drinking ,EMOTIONS ,GOAL (Psychology) ,MENTAL health ,PROBLEM solving ,RISK perception ,TELEMEDICINE ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,MOTIVATIONAL interviewing ,TREATMENT effectiveness - Abstract
Abstract: Aims: To test the efficacy of a web‐based alcohol intervention with and without guidance. Design: Three parallel groups with primary end‐point after 6 weeks. Setting: Open recruitment in the German working population. Participants: Adults (178 males/256 females, mean age 47 years) consuming at least 21/14 weekly standard units of alcohol (SUA) and scoring ≥ 8/6 on the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test. Intervention: Five web‐based modules including personalized normative feedback, motivational interviewing, goal setting, problem‐solving and emotion regulation during 5 weeks. One intervention group received an unguided self‐help version (
n =146) and the second received additional adherence‐focused guidance by eCoaches (n =144). Controls were on a waiting list with full access to usual care (n =144). Measurements: Primary outcome was weekly consumed SUA after 6 weeks. SUA after 6 months was examined as secondary outcome, next to numbers of participants drinking within the low‐risk range, and general and work‐specific mental health measures. Findings: All groups showed reductions of mean weekly SUA after 6 weeks (unguided: −8.0; guided: −8.5; control: −3.2). There was no significant difference between the unguided and guided intervention (P =0.324). Participants in the combined intervention group reported significantly fewer SUA than controls [B=−4.85, 95% confidence interval (CI)=−7.02 to −2.68,P < 0.001]. The intervention groups also showed significant reductions in SUA consumption after 6 months (B=−5.72, 95% CI=−7.71 to −3.73,P < 0.001) and improvements regarding general and work‐related mental health outcomes after 6 weeks and 6 months. Conclusions: A web‐based alcohol intervention, administered with or without personal guidance, significantly reduced mean weekly alcohol consumption and improved mental health and work‐related outcomes in the German working population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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6. Evaluating the (cost-)effectiveness of guided and unguided Internet-based self-help for problematic alcohol use in employees--a three arm randomized controlled trial.
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Boß, Leif, Lehr, Dirk, Berking, Matthias, Riper, Heleen, Schaub, Michael Patrick, and Ebert, David Daniel
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COST effectiveness ,SELF-help materials ,ONLINE education ,EMPLOYEES -- Alcohol use ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,OCCUPATIONAL health services ,LEGAL compliance ,DATA analysis ,INTERNET & economics ,OCCUPATIONAL diseases ,ALCOHOL drinking prevention ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,HEALTH behavior ,HEALTH promotion ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,RESEARCH ,SELF-evaluation ,EVALUATION research ,TELEMEDICINE ,ECONOMICS ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Background: Problematic alcohol consumption is associated with a high disease burden for affected individuals and has a detrimental impact on companies and society due to direct and indirect health costs. This protocol describes a study design to evaluate the (cost)-effectiveness of a guided and unguided Internet-based self-help intervention for employees called "GET.ON Clever weniger trinken" (be smart - drink less) compared to a waiting list control group.Methods: In a three-arm randomized controlled trial, 528 German adults who are currently members of the workforce will be recruited by occupational health departments of major health insurance companies. Employees aged 18 and older displaying problematic drinking patterns (>21/14 drinks per week and an AUDIT score > 8/6 for men/women) will be randomly assigned to one of three following study conditions: 1. unguided web-based self-help for problematic drinking, 2. adherence-focused guided self-help, and 3. waiting list control. Self-report data will be collected at baseline (T1), 6 weeks (T2), and 6 months (T3) after randomization. The primary outcome will be the reduction of alcohol standard units during the 7 days prior to T2, using the Timeline Followback method. Cost-effectiveness analyses to determine direct and indirect costs will be conducted from the perspectives of employers and the society. Data will be analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis and per protocol.Discussion: There is a need to identify effective low-threshold solutions to improve ill-health and reduce the negative economic consequences due to problematic alcohol drinking in workforces. If the proposed web-based intervention proves both to be efficacious and cost-effective, it may be a useful tool to increase utilization rates of interventions for problematic drinking in occupational settings.Trial Registration: German Register of Clinical Studies (DRKS): DRKS00006105 , date of registration: 2014-07-07. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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7. Deficits in Emotion-Regulation Skills Predict Alcohol Use During and After Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Alcohol Dependence.
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Berking, Matthias, Ebert, David, Hofmann, Stefan G., Margraf, Matthias, Wupperman, Peggilee, and Junghanns, Klaus
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COGNITIVE therapy , *DIAGNOSIS of alcoholism , *ALCOHOL drinking , *URINALYSIS , *BREATH tests , *BEHAVIOR therapy - Abstract
Objective: As emotion regulation is widely considered to be a primary motive in the misuse of alcohol, our aim in the study was to investigate whether deficits in adaptive emotion-regulation skills maintain alcohol dependence (AD). Method: A prospective study investigated whether emotion-regulation skills were associated with AD and whether these skills predicted alcohol use during and after treatment for AD. Participants were 116 individuals treated for AD with cognitive-behavioral therapy. Emotion regulation and severity of AD symptoms were assessed by self-report. Alcohol use during treatment was assessed by Breathalyzer and urine analysis for ethyl glucuronide; alcohol use during the 3-month follow-up interval was assessed by self-report. Results: Pretreatment emotion-regulation skills predicted alcohol use during treatment, and posttreatment emotion-regulation skills predicted alcohol use at follow-up, even when controlling for other predictors potentially related to emotion regulation. Among a broad range of specific emotion-regulation skills, the ability to tolerate negative emotions was the only skill that negatively predicted subsequent alcohol consumption when controlling for the other skills. Individuals in the AD sample reported significantly larger deficits in emotion-regulation skills than did those in a nonclinical control sample but significantly less than did those in a sample of individuals exclusively meeting criteria for major depressive disorder. Conclusions: Enhancement of general emotion-regulation skills, especially the ability to tolerate negative emotions, appears to be an important target in the treatment of AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
- Full Text
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