N/A
N=282
Do Consumer Providers Enhance Recovery?
Mental Disorder
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00781079 ↗Enrolled (actual)
282
Serious AEs
49.7%
Results posted
Oct 2014
Primary outcome: Primary: BASIS-R — 26.15; 29.34; 24.57; 26.76 units on a scale — p=.5
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- Consumer Provider (Behavioral)
- Age
- Pediatric, Adult, Older Adult
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- VA Office of Research and Development
- Primary completion
- Apr 2011
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY BASIS-R |
26.15; 29.34; 24.57; 26.76 | .5 |
| SECONDARY Mental Health Recovery Measure (MHRM) |
85.00; 78.3; 85.66; 80.52 | .56 |
| SECONDARY Patient Activation Measure |
39.31; 39.09; 40.34; 38.76 | .05 |
| SECONDARY Recovery Self-Assessment: Person in Recovery Version |
3.86; 3.81; 3.93; 3.83 | .58 |
| SECONDARY Illness Management and Recovery Scale: Client Self-Rating |
3.51; 3.39; 3.56; 3.48 | .87 |
| SECONDARY Quality of Life Interview, Brief Version |
4.64; 4.54; 4.72; 4.71 | .98 |
Summary
Serious mental illness (SMI) is the second most costly disorder treated in the VHA, yet clinical outcomes for these patients in public sector settings are often poor due to a combination of low quality care and severe cognitive and functional impairments evidenced by this group. While these problems are multifaceted, studies outside the VHA have shown that using "consumer providers" (CPs) can improve and augment public care. Similar to recovering addiction counselors, CPs are individuals with SMI who use their lived experiences to provide services to others with SMI. CPs can reach out to patients that are difficult to engage, assist patients with tasks of daily living, offer a variety of rehabilitation (vocational, social, residential) services, be role models and offer hope for recovery, and facilitate support groups. Randomized controlled and quasi-experimental trials, all done outside the VHA, have shown that CPs can provide services that yield at least equivalent patient outcomes with particular benefits noted on intensive case management teams. Based on these successes both the President's New Freedom Commission and the Veteran Administration's Mental Health Strategic Plan call for broader dissemination of CPs as way to make mental health services more recovery-oriented, a recent national priority. Because of these recent calls, employing mentally ill veterans has just begun, although no effort has been made to evaluate their impact inside the VA mental health system. Yet its success outside the VHA and the recent emphasis on recovery-oriented care suggests the need to test this model in the VHA.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Patient must have a Serious Mental Illness;
- Patient must be working with a VA Intensive Case Management team
Exclusion Criteria
- Prior exposure to intervention; Reduced capacity;
- Patient is no longer working with a VA Intensive Case Management
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT00781079). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.