Kelly S. DeMartini, PhD
Cards
About
Research
Overview
My research is broadly aimed at the development of treatments and interventions for alcohol use across patient populations, including young adult drinkers and patients with alcohol use disorders and medical comorbidities. Epidemiological data indicate that rates of heavy drinking in young adults have not decreased, despite decades of intensive research to develop efficacious interventions for this population. Among all those over 18 years of age in the United States, approximately 25% report binge drinking in the past month. Across populations, heavy alcohol consumption is associated with a host of negative consequences, including legal, medical, relational and other problems, even alcohol-related death. A great deal more research is needed to develop novel alcohol use interventions and to identify mechanisms to maximize the benefit of current treatments.
My research focuses on:
1. The development of mobile technology-based interventions, including SMS-based, smartphone, and wearable platforms
2. Quantitative modeling (including person-centered models and Baysian models) of factors related to trajectories of alcohol use both during and post-treatment
3. Understanding factors, including gender, that mediate or moderate alcohol treatment response
4. The development of brief alcohol interventions for young adult drinkers
I have a particular interest in the development of technology-based treatments for hazardous drinking and alcohol use disorders, especially for patients with comorbid medical conditions. These conditions can limit a patient's ability to travel for treatment; provide adjunct care via technology-based interventions can provide necessary, additional support. For young adults, technology-based treatments can increase their willingness to participate in treatment and match their preferences for how to engage providers.
Overall, my research aims to develop efficacious treatments for alcohol use disorders, particularly treatments that can be accessed outside of the typical treatment setting. Building these treatments requires thorough understanding of key treatment mediators and moderators, including those that vary over time. Treatments that increase access to care and account for these person-specific mediators could greatly increase efficacy.
Medical Research Interests
Public Health Interests
Clinical Care
Overview
Clinical Specialties
News & Links
News
- August 03, 2024
Addressing Behavioral Health in Patients With End-stage Liver Disease
- April 10, 2023
Fucito, DeMartini Awarded Grant by NIAAA
- May 18, 2022
Yale Researchers Compare BACTrack Skyn to Other Alcohol Monitoring Approaches
- November 30, 2017
Yale study: Young adults could be at risk of heavier drinking with shortened night of sleep