Project Summary:
Women comprise 10% of the U.S. Veteran population, expected to rise to 35% by 2035.1, 2 37% of female
Veterans report risky or problem alcohol use4, and many have complex comorbidity requiring specialized
treatment5 but only 2% of women Veterans receive treatment in VA Substance Use Disorder (SUD) clinics.
There is currently no evidence-based, Veteran-centric, female segregated treatment with female-specific
programming for AUD or SUD at the VA. The vast majority of women at the V.A. are limited to gender-
neutral treatments for AUD in Specialty SUD clinics, which is a mixed gender setting and is unappealing to
women Veterans6. Only 19%7 to 30%8 of VAs offer female-only SUD treatments, and these are offered in
Specialty SUD clinics, and do not contain women-specific content shown to be crucial for efficacy9. Since
women are likely to seek AUD care with their Primary Care (PC) Providers10, 11, and women Veterans report
preference for PC colocation of AUD services12, PC is a promising setting to reduce treatment entry barriers,
increase access to care and outcome efficacy for AUD among women Veterans. This R01 resubmission, “A
Female-Specific Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) Group for Alcohol Use Disorder in VA Primary Care
Settings,” in response to PA-19-055, and NOT-AA-19-010, proposes a Hybrid Type 118 study to adapt a
single-gender group modality Female-Specific CBT developed for civilian females with AUD19-22, 41, and to
test the new Veteran-Centric female-specific CBT group (FS-CBT) in VA PC at New York Harbor Healthcare
System (NYHHS) VA, compared to Usual Care (UC) for AUD in PC. FS-CBT is a unique 12-session weekly
group CBT treatment for AUD, providing: 1. AUD interventions; 2. general female specific content; 3.
female-Veteran content; 4. wellness and self-care; and 5. a novel 24/7 social support for abstinence
discussion mobile app. Aim 1. RCT (n=162) testing FS-CBT+UC for AUD in PC compared to UC only in PC
for women Veterans, with baseline and 3-, 9-, 15- month assessments. UC will be delivered by grant-funded
PCP staff to ensure fidelity. H.1a.Women VA PC patients in FS-CBT+UC for AUD at a PC site will be more
likely to access and engage in treatment for AUD than women in UC. H.1b. Women in FS-CBT+UC will have
better drinking and secondary outcomes than women in UC only. H.1c. Outcomes in FS-CBT+UC vs UC
will be mediated by social support, AUD medication, coping skills, and subjective distress. Aim 2.
Formative evaluation of FS-CBT with 20 women Veterans in FS-CBT, 20 in UC, 15 who did not enroll, and
16 PC providers, using “Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research” will be done.
This project is consistent with NIAAA priorities for behavioral and health services, and Advancing Science
for the Health of Women: Trans-NIH Strategic Plan24, and the VA Strategic Plan25 to focus resources more
efficiently and improve timeliness of services. The long-term objective is to produce an “off the shelf”
treatment to fill a gap in evidence-based, accessible, patient-centered AUD treatment for women Veterans.