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N/A N=97 Randomized Treatment

Specialized Community Disease Management to Reduce Substance Use and Hospital Readmissions

Drug Use · Alcohol Use · Congestive Heart Failure · Pneumonia · Acute Myocardial Infarction

Enrolled (actual)
97
Serious AEs
38.1%
Results posted
Aug 2018
Primary outcome: Primary: Change in Substance Use Rates From Baseline — 51.37; 51.38; 35.53; 26.65 Days of Substance Use

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Specialized Community Disease Management (Behavioral); Treatment As Usual (Behavioral)
Age
Adult, Older Adult · 18+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
Treatment Research Institute
Primary completion
Feb 2017

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Change in Substance Use Rates From Baseline
51.37; 51.38; 35.53; 26.65; 30.65; 30.47
SECONDARY
Change in Treatment Session Attendance From Baseline
11.36; 4.75; 9.34; 5.93; 6.17; 3.27
SECONDARY
Number of Hospitalizations and Use of Emergency Services
3.53; 5.5; 4.76; 4.91; 4.17; 3.55

Summary

This study will assess Specialized Community Disease Management (SCDM), an intervention which employs various evidence-based strategies to engage substance using co-morbid patients while in the hospital and follow them into the community via an empirically validated telephone approach as well as contact with a trained community health worker peer specialist. The investigators will first adapt and refine the core SCDM intervention with patient, provider, and stakeholder input through an active community advisory board. The investigators will then conduct a three-year, randomized controlled trial of 222 patients enrolled prior to hospital discharge who are diagnosed with congestive heart failure, pneumonia, acute myocardial infarction, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes mellitus, or end-stage renal disease, and a substance use disorder (SUD). Patients will be randomized to either the SCDM intervention or Treatment as Usual (TAU), in which a team of nurse navigators and community health workers follow patients (primarily by telephone) for 90 days post-discharge, but do not address the specific needs of SUDs. The investigators will test the following four hypotheses: (1) patients randomized to SCDM will demonstrate larger reductions in substance use measured by urine-confirmed self-reported days using over the 6-month follow-up compared to patients randomized to TAU, (2) patients randomized to SCDM will attend more specialty substance abuse intervention and treatment sessions over the 6 month follow-up than patients randomized to TAU, (3) patients randomized to SCDM will demonstrate reduced HIV transmission risk behaviors and greater rates of HIV testing over the 6 month follow-up than patients randomized to TAU, and (4) patients randomized to SCDM will experience fewer days of rehospitalization and use of acute emergency services than patients randomized to TAU.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • patient is 18 years or older
  • alcohol and/or drug screening score that indicates at least mild problem severity

Exclusion Criteria

  • medical or psychiatric complications
  • patient was admitted to hospital directly from a drug and alcohol inpatient rehabilitation facility
  • patient reports plans to leave the area within the next 12 months
  • patient is unable to provide valid informed consent
  • patient is attending dialysis
  • patient is not English-speaking
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02059005). 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.

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