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Dive into the research topics where James Shearer is active.

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Featured researches published by James Shearer.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2003

A randomised controlled trial of methadone maintenance treatment versus wait list control in an Australian prison system

Kate Dolan; James Shearer; Margaret MacDonald; Richard P. Mattick; Wayne Hall; Alex Wodak

OBJECTIVES The aim was to determine whether methadone maintenance treatment reduced heroin use, syringe sharing and HIV or hepatitis C incidence among prisoners. METHODS All eligible prisoners seeking drug treatment were randomised to methadone or a waitlist control group from 1997 to 1998 and followed up after 4 months. Heroin use was measured by hair analysis and self report; drugs used and injected and syringe sharing were measured by self report. Hepatitis C and HIV incidence was measured by serology. RESULTS Of 593 eligible prisoners, 382 (64%) were randomised to MMT (n=191) or control (n=191). 129 treated and 124 control subjects were followed up at 5 months. Heroin use was significantly lower among treated than control subjects at follow up. Treated subjects reported lower levels of drug injection and syringe sharing at follow up. There was no difference in HIV or hepatitis C incidence. CONCLUSIONS Consideration should be given to the introduction of prison methadone programs particular where community based programs exist.


Addiction | 2009

A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of modafinil (200 mg/day) for methamphetamine dependence

James Shearer; Shane Darke; Craig Rodgers; Tim Slade; Ingrid van Beek; John Lewis; Donna Brady; Rebecca McKetin; Richard P. Mattick; A. Wodak

AIM To examine the safety and efficacy of modafinil (200 mg/day) compared to placebo in the treatment of methamphetamine dependence and to examine predictors of post-treatment outcome. PARTICIPANTS AND DESIGN Eighty methamphetamine-dependent subjects in Sydney, Australia were allocated randomly to modafinil (200 mg/day) (n = 38) or placebo (n = 42) under double-blind conditions for 10 weeks with a further 12 weeks post-treatment follow-up. MEASURES Comprehensive drug use data (urine specimens and self-report) and other health and psychosocial data were collected weekly during treatment and research interviews at baseline, week 10 and week 22. RESULTS Treatment retention and medication adherence were equivalent between groups. There were no differences in methamphetamine abstinence, craving or severity of dependence. Medication-compliant subjects tended to provide more methamphetamine-negative urine samples over the 10-week treatment period (P = 0.07). Outcomes were better for methamphetamine-dependent subjects with no other substance dependence and those who accessed counselling. There were statistically significant reductions in systolic blood pressure (P = 0.03) and weight gain (P = 0.05) in modafinil-compliant subjects compared to placebo. There were no medication-related serious adverse events. Adverse events were generally mild and consistent with known pharmacological effects. CONCLUSIONS Modafinil demonstrated promise in reducing methamphetamine use in selected methamphetamine-dependent patients. The study findings support definitive trials of modafinil in larger multi-site trials.


Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health | 2006

Cost effectiveness analysis of smoking cessation interventions

James Shearer; Marian Shanahan

Objective: To identify which smoking cessation interventions provide the most efficient use of health care resources at a population level.


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2004

Pharmacotherapies for problematic psychostimulant use: a review of current research

James Shearer; Linda Gowing

This review summarizes the current status of clinical research on pharmacotherapies for problematic psychostimulant use. The use of psychostimulants, including amphetamine, cocaine and ecstasy, is increasingly a feature of Australian life as is the presentation of patients with psychostimulant disorders. A lack of experience, resources and treatment options have constrained the response of treatment services to such problems. Despite extensive research, particularly in the area of cocaine, no pharmacotherapy has been proven effective in the management of psychostimulant disorders. The harms associated with problematic psychostimulant use warrant further controlled research in innovative approaches integrated with psychosocial interventions.


Journal of Law Medicine & Ethics | 2004

Evaluation of the condom distribution program in New South Wales prisons Australia.

Kate Dolan; David Lowe; James Shearer

Male to male unprotected anal sex is the main route of HIV transmission in Australia. The Australian Study of Health and Relationships a large representative population survey of sexual health behaviors found that six percent of males in the general population have engaged in homosexual activity. These findings were consistent with studies in Europe and North America. Condoms have been shown to reduce the transmission of HIV in the community. Barriers to the use of condoms include access stigma and cost. Nevertheless increased condom use has been reported among homosexual males sex workers and injecting drug users although recent declines in condom use among homosexuals has presented new challenges in HIV prevention. The prevalence of male to male sexual activity may be higher in prison than in the general population. Sexual activity in prison can be consensual and non-consensual involving both homosexual/bisexual and heterosexual men. Estimates of homosexual activity in prisons have ranged from nine percent in New South Wales (NSW) prisons to 12% in South Australian prisons to as high as 30% in US federal prisons. A study that monitored HIV risk behaviour in 181 inmates attending NSW prison AIDS educational courses found four percent had engaged in anal sex and eight percent other types of sex while in prison. An inmate general health survey involving 530 randomly selected male NSW prison inmates found five percent had engaged in consensual sex whilst in jail with two percent reporting non-consensual sex. Four cases of HIV transmission in Australian prisons have been documented. In one of those cases homosexual activity was implicated as the possible route of transmission. (excerpt)


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2008

The principles of agonist pharmacotherapy for psychostimulant dependence

James Shearer

ISSUES Psychostimulant dependence is a chronic, relapsing condition which is highly treatment refractory. No medications to date have been any more successful than placebo in reducing psychostimulant use in dependent patients. Agonist strategies have attracted limited attention. APPROACH Successful examples of agonist pharmacotherapy in the treatment of heroin and nicotine dependence are first considered. Agonist pharmacological approaches to the treatment of psychostimulant dependence are then examined, based on the dopamine receptor agonist and indirect dopamine agonist strategies. Finally, the potential extension of the concept of agonist pharmacotherapy to include the novel non-amphetamine-type stimulant, modafinil, is discussed. CONCLUSIONS Agonist approaches appear to be viable with risks outweighed by benefits in carefully selected, monitored and motivated patients. On the other hand, the effectiveness of indirect agonists such as dexamphetamine and methylphenidate are not established. Further research is required to determine optimal treatment models (whether maintenance or withdrawal), effective safe dosages and duration (short or long term).


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2002

Substitution therapy for amphetamine users

James Shearer; John Sherman; Alex Wodak; Ingrid van Beek

At the commencement of the third millenium, the illicit use of amphetamines continues to be a growing problem in many countries around the world, yet treatment responses remain in need of further development. This is particularly true with regards to pharmacotherapy for amphetamine dependence. In this Harm Reduction Digest four authors who bring together considerable research and clinical experience in this area describe the nature of amphetamine-related problems and consider the role of amphetamine agonists in substitution therapy for amphetamine dependence. This is a timely paper which should be of interest to clinicians, researchers and regulators.


Drugs & Aging | 2012

Health State Values for Use in the Economic Evaluation of Treatments for Alzheimer’s Disease

James Shearer; Colin Green; Craig Ritchie; John Zajicek

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a chronic, progressive, neurodegenerative disease that places a heavy burden on people with the condition, their families and carers, health care systems and society in general. Health-related quality of life (HR-QOL) in patients deteriorates as the cognitive, behavioural and functional symptoms of AD develop. The human and financial cost of AD is forecast to grow rapidly as populations age, and those responsible for planning and financing health care face the challenge of allocating increasingly scarce resources against current and future interventions targeted towards AD. These include calls for early detection and diagnosis, preventative strategies, new medications, residential care, supportive care, and meeting the needs of carers as well as patients.Health care funders in many health systems now require a demonstration of the value of new interventions through a comparison of benefits in terms of improvements in HR-QOL and costs relative to those of competing or existing practices. Changes in HR-QOL provide the basis for the calculation of the quality-adjusted life-year (QALY), a key outcome used in economic evaluations to compare treatments within and between different disease conditions.The objective of this systematic review was to provide a summary of the published health state values (utilities) for AD patients and their carers that are currently available to estimate QALYs for use in health economic evaluations of interventions in AD. The health care literature was searched for articles published in English between 2000 and 2011, using keywords and variants including ‘quality-adjusted life years’, ‘health state indicators’, ‘health utilities’ and the specific names of generic measures of HR-QOL and health state valuation techniques. Databases searched included MEDLINE, EMBASE, NHS EED, PsycINFO and ISI Web of Science.This review identified 12 studies that reported utility values associated with health states in AD. Values for AD health states categorized according to cognitive impairment (where 1 = perfect health and 0 = dead) ranged from mild AD (0.52–0.73) to moderate AD (0.30–0.53) to severe AD (0.12–0.49). Utility values were almost all based on two generic measures of HR-QOL: the EQ-5D and Health Utility Index mark 2/3 (HUI2/3). There were no health state values estimated from condition- or disease-specific measures of HR-QOL. The review also identified 18 published cost-utility analyses (CUAs) of treatments for AD. The CUAs incorporated results from only three of the identified health state valuation studies. Twelve CUAs relied on the same study for health state values.We conclude that the literature on health state values in AD is limited and overly reliant on a single symptom (cognition) to describe disease progression. Other approaches to characterizing disease progression in AD based on multiple outcomes or dependency may be better predictors of costs and utilities in economic evaluations. Patient and proxy ratings were poorly correlated, particularly in patients with more advanced AD. However, proxy ratings displayed the validity and reliability across the entire range of AD severity needed to detect long-term changes relevant to economic evaluation. Further longitudinal research of patient and carer HR-QOL based on multidimensional measures of outcome and utilities is needed.


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2007

Contemporary cocaine use patterns and associated harms in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia

James Shearer; Jennifer Johnston; Craig L. Fry; Sharlene Kaye; Paul Dillon; Paul Dietze; Linette Collins

The aim of this paper was to explore the nature of cocaine use and harms through a cross-sectional survey of cocaine users interviewed in the two largest Australian cities of Sydney (n = 88) and Melbourne (n = 77) between October 2004 and January 2005. The study supported previous findings that Australian cocaine users could be classified broadly into two types. The majority of cocaine users interviewed were classified as socially and economically integrated. They were young, employed, well-educated people who generally snorted cocaine on a recreational basis, typically in conjunction with other illicit and licit drugs. A second group of socially and economically marginalised users, residing mainly in Sydney, injected cocaine often in conjunction with heroin. This group reported significantly higher levels of cocaine use, cocaine dependence, criminal behaviour and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) risk-taking behaviour. Heroin use was found to predict independently higher levels of cocaine use, criminal behaviour, needle sharing and physical problems in this sample, suggesting that increased resources and coverage for combined heroin/cocaine users may have scope for reducing cocaine-related problems in the Australian community.


Drug and Alcohol Review | 2004

Can drug injectors be encouraged to adopt non-injecting routes of administration (NIROA) for drugs?

Kate Dolan; Nicole Clement; David Rouen; Vaughan W. Rees; James Shearer; Alex Wodak

Drug use by injection can cause problems specific to this form of administration. Problems include an increased risk of drug overdose, drug dependence, the transmission of HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C and vein damage. Shifting drug injectors from injecting to another route of administration may minimize these problems. The aims of the study were to develop and trial an intervention to assist willing injecting drug users (IDUs) to shift to non-injecting routes of administration (NIROA) and to explore the acceptability and practicality of facilitating NIROA. IDUs were assessed and suitable subjects entered a cognitive behavioural trial consisting of five 1-hour sessions of individual therapy with a registered psychologist. Forty-two subjects were assessed (22 males and 20 females). Thirty subjects entered treatment. The mean age was 36 years. Twenty-one subjects were followed-up at 3 months and 10 subjects at 6 months. At 3 and 6 months, the proportion of subjects who had commenced using NIROA was 30% and 50%, respectively. This pilot study showed that it was possible to assist a minority of drug injectors to move from injecting to the non-injecting administration of drugs. However, many of these appeared to be already motivated to cease using drugs and adopting NIROA was one way of assisting this. Poor follow-up rate, lack of control group, questions about cost-effectiveness and the impact of market factors which possibly constrain shifting to NIROA suggest that further research is needed before it could be said that NIROA should be recommended as a viable harm reduction strategy in the Australian context.

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John Zajicek

Plymouth State University

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Andrew Nunn

University College London

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Shahrukh Mallik

University College London

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Jane Vickery

Plymouth State University

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Jeremy Hobart

Plymouth State University

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