SBIR-STTR Award

Development of Substance Abuse Relapse Reduction System
Award last edited on: 6/12/08

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NIH : NIDA
Total Award Amount
$1,022,959
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Grant R Grissom

Company Information

Field Diagnostic Services Inc (AKA: PsyberMetrics~Acrx)

444 Oxford Valley Road Suite 300
Langhorne, PA 19047
   (215) 359-3900
   dougd@fielddiagnostics.com
   www.fielddiagnostics.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 01
County: Bucks

Phase I

Contract Number: 1R43DA010251-01
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase I year
1995
Phase I Amount
$100,000
Substance abuse treatment research has repeatedly documented high relapse rates following treatment. These relapses represent enormous costs in both economic and human terms. if the instrumentation and procedures were available, it is likely that concurrent monitoring during treatment and intensive monitoring of the recover) process could substantially reduce relapse rates. The Phase i research indicated the desirability of initiating monitoring concurrent) with treatment; demonstrated the feasibility of classifying the degree of relapse risk at the time of discharge; and showed that post-treatment monitoring can providE early warning of imminent relapse. Phase ii objectives are to complete the development of SARRS procedures for (1) matching patients to treatment services; (2) monitoring their progress during treatment; (3) identifying those who, at the point of discharge, are at elevated rib for relapse; (4) using post-treatment telephonic monitoring of this group to avert relapse. The information technology will be developed to automate data entry, verification, processing, and report generation. Hierarchical linear modeling will be used to develop predictive algorithms. Costs and benefits (e.g., relapse reduction, medical cost-offset) will be quantified. PROPOSED COMMERCIAL APPLICATION: Major SARRS clients are treatment providers, EAP's, integrated healthcare delivery systems, HM0's and other managed care firms. SARRS will enable these organizations to substantially reduce relapse rates, and the medical / mental health costs associated with relapse, for recovering substance abusers serviced by their programs.

Phase II

Contract Number: 2R44DA010251-02
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
1997
(last award dollars: 2000)
Phase II Amount
$922,959

Substance abuse treatment research has repeatedly documented high relapse rates following treatment. These relapses represent enormous costs in both economic and human terms. if the instrumentation and procedures were available, it is likely that concurrent monitoring during treatment and intensive monitoring of the recover) process could substantially reduce relapse rates. The Phase i research indicated the desirability of initiating monitoring concurrent) with treatment; demonstrated the feasibility of classifying the degree of relapse risk at the time of discharge; and showed that post-treatment monitoring can providE early warning of imminent relapse. Phase ii objectives are to complete the development of SARRS procedures for (1) matching patients to treatment services; (2) monitoring their progress during treatment; (3) identifying those who, at the point of discharge, are at elevated rib for relapse; (4) using post-treatment telephonic monitoring of this group to avert relapse. The information technology will be developed to automate data entry, verification, processing, and report generation. Hierarchical linear modeling will be used to develop predictive algorithms. Costs and benefits (e.g., relapse reduction, medical cost-offset) will be quantified.Proposed commercial application:Major SARRS clients are treatment providers, EAP's, integrated healthcare delivery systems, HM0's and other managed care firms. SARRS will enable these organizations to substantially reduce relapse rates, and the medical / mental health costs associated with relapse, for recovering substance abusers serviced by their programs.Thesaurus termsdrug abuse prevention, drug abuse therapy, health care service evaluation, human therapy evaluation, patient care management, relapse /recurrence data management, health care cost /financing, mathematical model, outcomes research behavioral /social science research tag, health services research tag, human subjectNational Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)