Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Christina Aivadyan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Christina Aivadyan.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2015

The Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-5 (AUDADIS-5): Reliability of substance use and psychiatric disorder modules in a general population sample

Bridget F. Grant; Risë B. Goldstein; Sharon M. Smith; Jeesun Jung; Haitao Zhang; Sanchen P. Chou; Roger P. Pickering; Wenjun J. Ruan; Boji Huang; Tulshi D. Saha; Christina Aivadyan; Eliana Greenstein; Deborah S. Hasin

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to assess the test-retest reliability of substance use disorder and psychiatric modules in the Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) Version (AUDADIS-5). METHODS Kappa and intraclass correlation coefficients were calculated for DSM-5 substance use and psychiatric disorder diagnoses and dimensional criteria scales using a test-retest design among 1006 respondents drawn from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (NESARC-III). RESULTS Reliabilities of substance use disorder diagnoses and associated criteria scales were generally good to excellent, while reliabilities for mood, anxiety and trauma and stress-related disorders and associated scales were generally in the fair to good range. CONCLUSIONS The observed reliability of the DSM-5 diagnoses and dimensional scales for the substance use and psychiatric disorders found in this study indicates that the AUDADIS-5 can be a useful tool in various research settings, particularly in studies of the general population, the target population for which it was designed.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2015

The Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-5 (AUDADIS-5): Procedural validity of substance use disorders modules through clinical re-appraisal in a general population sample

Deborah S. Hasin; Eliana Greenstein; Christina Aivadyan; Malki Stohl; Efrat Aharonovich; Tulshi D. Saha; Risë B. Goldstein; Edward V. Nunes; Jeesun Jung; Haitao Zhang; Bridget F. Grant

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to assess the procedural validity of the substance disorder modules of the lay-administered Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) Version (AUDADIS-5) through clinician re-appraisal re-interviews. METHODS The study employed a test-retest design among 712 respondents from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (NESARC-III). A clinician-administered, semi-structured interview, the Psychiatric Research Interview for Substance and Mental Disorders, DSM-5 version (PRISM-5) was used as the re-appraisal. Kappa coeffients indicated concordance of the AUDADIS-5 and PRISM-5 for DSM-5 substance use disorder diagnoses, while intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) indicated concordance on dimensional scales indicating the DSM-5 criteria count for each disorder. RESULTS With few exceptions, concordance of the AUDADIS-5 and the PRISM-5 for DSM-5 diagnoses of substance use disorders ranged from fair to good (κ=0.40-0.72). Concordance on dimensional scales was excellent (ICC≥0.75) for the majority of DSM-5 SUD diagnoses, and fair to good (ICC=0.43-0.72) for most of the rest. CONCLUSIONS As indicated by concordance with a semi-structured clinician-administered re-appraisal, the procedural validity of the AUDADIS-5 DSM-5 substance use disorder diagnoses found in this study indicates that these AUDADIS-5 diagnoses are useful tools in epidemiologic studies. The considerably stronger concordance of the AUDADIS-5 and PRISM-5 dimensional DSM-5 SUD measures supports a current movement to place more emphasis on dimensional measures of psychopathology, and suggests that such measures may be more informative than binary diagnoses for research, and possibly for clinical purposes as well.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2010

The dimensionality of alcohol use disorders: Results from Israel

Dvora Shmulewitz; Katherine M. Keyes; Cheryl L. Beseler; Efrat Aharonovich; Christina Aivadyan; Baruch Spivak; Deborah S. Hasin

AIMS To prepare for DSM-V, the structure of DSM-IV alcohol dependence and abuse criteria and a proposed additional criterion, at-risk drinking, require study in countries with low per-capita consumption, and comparison of current and lifetime results within the same sample. We investigated DSM-IV Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD) criteria in Israel, where per-capita alcohol consumption is low. METHODS Household residents selected from the Israeli population register (N=1338) were interviewed with the AUDADIS. Item response theory analyses were conducted using MPlus, and diagnostic thresholds were examined with the kappa statistic. RESULTS Dependence and abuse criteria fit a unidimensional model interspersed across the severity continuum, for both current and lifetime timeframes. Legal problems were rare and did not improve model fit. Weekly at-risk drinking reflected greater severity than in U.S. samples. When dependence and abuse criteria were combined, a diagnostic threshold of > or =3 criteria produced the best agreement with DSM-IV diagnoses (kappa>0.80). CONCLUSION Consistent with other studies, alcohol dependence and abuse criteria reflected a latent variable representing a single AUD. Results suggested little effect in removing legal problems and little gained by adding weekly at-risk drinking. Results contribute to knowledge about AUD criteria by examining them in a low-consumption country.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2015

Procedural validity of the AUDADIS-5 depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder modules: Substance abusers and others in the general population

Deborah S. Hasin; Dvora Shmulewitz; Malka Stohl; Eliana Greenstein; Christina Aivadyan; Kara Morita; Tulshi D. Saha; Efrat Aharonovich; Jeesun Jung; Haitao Zhang; Edward V. Nunes; Bridget F. Grant

BACKGROUND Little is known about the procedural validity of lay-administered, fully-structured assessments of depressive, anxiety and post-traumatic stress (PTSD) disorders in the general population as determined by comparison with clinical re-appraisal, and whether this differs between current regular substance abusers and others. We evaluated the procedural validity of the Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule, DSM-5 Version (AUDADIS-5) assessment of these disorders through clinician re-interviews. METHODS Test-retest design among respondents from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (NESARC-III): (264 current regular substance abusers, 447 others). Clinicians blinded to AUDADIS-5 results administered the semi-structured Psychiatric Research Interview for Substance and Mental Disorders, DSM-5 version (PRISM-5). AUDADIS-5/PRISM-5 concordance was indicated by kappa (κ) for diagnoses and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) for dimensional measures (DSM-5 symptom or criterion counts). Results were compared between current regular substance abusers and others. RESULTS AUDADIS-5 and PRISM-5 concordance for DSM-5 depressive disorders, anxiety disorders and PTSD was generally fair to moderate (κ=0.24-0.59), with concordance on dimensional scales much better (ICC=0.53-0.81). Concordance differed little between regular substance abusers and others. CONCLUSIONS AUDADIS-5/PRISM-5 concordance indicated procedural validity for the AUDADIS-5 among substance abusers and others, suggesting that AUDADIS-5 diagnoses of DSM-5 depressive, anxiety and PTSD diagnoses are informative measures in both groups in epidemiological studies. The stronger concordance on dimensional measures supports the current movement toward dimensional psychopathology measures, suggesting that such measures provide important information for research in the NESARC-III and other datasets, and possibly for clinical purposes as well.


Addiction | 2011

Nicotine dependence, abuse and craving: dimensionality in an Israeli sample.

Dvora Shmulewitz; Katherine M. Keyes; Melanie M. Wall; Efrat Aharonovich; Christina Aivadyan; Eliana Greenstein; Baruch Spivak; Abraham Weizman; Amos Frisch; Bridget F. Grant; Deborah S. Hasin

AIMS Evidence-based changes planned for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5th edition (DSM-5) substance use disorders (SUDs) include combining dependence and three of the abuse criteria into one disorder and adding a criterion indicating craving. Because DSM-IV did not include a category for nicotine abuse, little empirical support is available for aligning the nicotine use disorder criteria with the DSM-5 criteria for other SUDs. DESIGN Latent variable analyses, bootstrap tests and likelihood ratio tests were used to explore the unidimensionality, psychometric properties and information of the nicotine criteria. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS A sample of household residents selected from the Israeli population register yielded 727 life-time cigarette smokers. MEASUREMENTS DSM-IV nicotine dependence criteria and proposed abuse and craving criteria, assessed with a structured interview. FINDINGS Three abuse criteria (hazardous use, social/interpersonal problems and neglect roles) were prevalent among smokers, formed a unidimensional latent trait with nicotine dependence criteria, were intermixed with dependence criteria across the severity spectrum and significantly increased the diagnostic information over the dependence-only model. A craving criterion was shown to fit well with the other criteria. CONCLUSION Similar to findings from research on other substances, nicotine dependence, abuse and craving criteria appear to derive from a common underlying dimension. The results support alignment of nicotine criteria with those for alcohol and drug use disorders in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5th edition.


PLOS ONE | 2018

A search algorithm for identifying likely users and non-users of marijuana from the free text of the electronic medical record

Salomeh Keyhani; Marzieh Vali; Beth E. Cohen; Alexandra Woodbridge; Melanie B. Arenson; Elnaz Eilkhani; Christina Aivadyan; Deborah S. Hasin

Background The harmful effects of marijuana on health and in particular cardiovascular health are understudied. To develop such knowledge, an efficient method of developing an informative cohort of marijuana users and non-users is needed. Methods We identified patients with a diagnosis of coronary artery disease using ICD-9 codes who were seen in the San Francisco VA in 2015. We imported these patients’ medical record notes into an informatics platform that facilitated text searches. We categorized patients into those with evidence of marijuana use in the past 12 months and patients with no such evidence, using the following text strings: “marijuana”, “mjx”, and “cannabis”. We randomly selected 51 users and 51 non-users based on this preliminary classification, and sent a recruitment letter to 97 of these patients who had contact information available. Patients were interviewed on marijuana use and domains related to cardiovascular health. Data on marijuana use collected from the medical record was compared to data collected as part of the interview. Results The interview completion rate was 71%. Among the 35 patients identified by text strings as having used marijuana in the previous year, 15 had used marijuana in the past 30 days (positive predictive value = 42.9%). The probability of use in the past month increased from 8.8% to 42.9% in people who have these keywords in their medical record compared to those who did not have these terms in their medical record. Conclusion Methods that combine text search strategies for participant recruitment with health interviews provide an efficient approach to developing prospective cohorts that can be used to study the health effects of marijuana.


Addiction Research & Theory | 2017

Short-term effects of a brief intervention to reduce alcohol use and sexual risk among homeless young adults: results from a randomized controlled trial

Ronald G. Thompson; Jennifer C. Elliott; Mei-Chen Hu; Christina Aivadyan; Efrat Aharonovich; Deborah S. Hasin

Abstract Background: Homeless young adults are more likely than their never-homeless counterparts to abuse alcohol and engage in risky sexual behaviors, yet no interventions to simultaneously reduce both these behaviors among this vulnerable population have been systematically designed and evaluated. We therefore developed a brief intervention (BI) to reduce both alcohol use and sexual risk behaviors among homeless young adults. The results of a randomized trial testing the BI against an education comparison (EC) are presented. Method: Young adults (N = 61; age 17–22 years) from an urban, Northeastern crisis shelter were randomly assigned to either the two-session, individual-level BI or a time-matched, two-session, individual-level EC. Generalized linear mixed models for repeated measures determined effects of treatment condition on outcomes. Results: The BI significantly increased participant readiness to change alcohol use. However, it did not significantly decrease primary alcohol or HIV sexual risk outcomes, independently or relative to EC (all ps > 0.05). Participants in the EC reduced times engaged in unprotected sex between baseline and post-intervention to a significantly greater extent (p < 0.01) than those in the BI condition. Participants in both conditions reported satisfaction with respective interventions. Conclusions: Findings suggest that the BI was acceptable and successful in getting participants to consider changing their drinking. However, lack of change in alcohol and sexual behavior outcomes indicates the need for further research to determine how to translate readiness to change into actual behavioral change among homeless young adults.


Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs | 2012

Alcohol Use Disorders and Perceived Drinking Norms: Ethnic Differences in Israeli Adults

Dvora Shmulewitz; Melanie M. Wall; Katherine M. Keyes; Efrat Aharonovich; Christina Aivadyan; Eliana Greenstein; Baruch Spivak; Abraham Weizman; Amos Frisch; Deborah S. Hasin


Principles of Addiction#R##N#Comprehensive Addictive Behaviors and Disorders, Volume 1 | 2013

Epidemiology of Addiction

Miriam C. Fenton; Christina Aivadyan; Deborah S. Hasin


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2017

Drinking Norms Scale

Dvora Shmulewitz; Melanie M. Wall; Katherine M. Keyes; Efrat Aharonovich; Christina Aivadyan; Eliana Greenstein; Baruch Spivak; Abraham Weizman; Amos Frisch; Deborah S. Hasin

Collaboration


Dive into the Christina Aivadyan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Efrat Aharonovich

Columbia University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bridget F. Grant

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Haitao Zhang

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeesun Jung

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Melanie M. Wall

Columbia University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge