Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Research on economic mobility barriers consistently demonstrates that lack of access to jobs that pay living wages and to asset building opportunities coupled with cliff effects across public assistance programs (families losing multiple benefits at the same time when their incomes increase) traps families in a cycle of poverty and food insecurity, and as a result, negatively impacts their financial well-being and physical and mental health. The investigators will explore the extent to which an Economic Mobility Pilot improves the financial well-being, physical and mental health, and reduces the social risks of study participants. Study participants will be eligible consented Boston Medical Center (BMC) employees. The intervention developed for this study consists of six months of coaching session offered by the Career Navigator. Participant will receive support on career and financial through services, such as career pathway navigation, employee benefit maximization, financial literacy, wealth building, resources, and referrals. A step wedge design will be implemented with participants randomized in two groups, Group 1, and Group 2 - intervention on different timeframe, analysis of the difference and similarities between groups pre- and post-survey. The qualitative component will include focus group of participants to provide information on the employee's perception of the intervention received, barriers to adherence and facilitators, and semi- structured interviews of the employer leadership to help assess the barriers and facilitators of the pilot. A primary aim of this research is to monitor changes in economic mobility and financial well-being. Additional aims are to investigate changes in household hardships and employee, employee depressive symptoms, and their child's health. The investigators will examine whether the participants in the intervention group compared to those before receiving the intervention, are more likely to: - Increase employee retention and self-reported financial well-being. - Improve self-reported food security. - Improve housing stability, energy security, childcare access, and/or health care access. - Improve employee self-reported physical health status, and/or reduce self-reported anxiety and depressive symptoms. - Improve employee-reported physical health status of the employee's child. - Cost of delivery of the intervention - Increased family income as result of this intervention


Clinical Trial Description

During the COVID-19 pandemic longstanding economic inequities have been exacerbated for people with low incomes in frontline and service sector jobs. These inequities are manifested downstream in the form of food insecurity (FI) and related health consequences. Research on economic mobility barriers consistently demonstrates that lack of access to jobs that pay living wages and to asset building opportunities coupled with cliff effects across public assistance programs (families losing multiple benefits at the same time when their incomes increase) traps families in a cycle of poverty and economic hardships, and as a result, negatively impacts their physical and mental health. This study proposes to explore the extent to which an Economic Mobility Pilot improves the financial well-being, physical and mental health, and reduces the social risks of study participants. As part of Boston Medical Center (BMC) commitment to advancing its mission to promote equity as an anchor institution in the community, the health system seeks to identify strategies that increase employment and career building opportunities for members of marginalized communities served by BMC. The Boston Collaborative plays a leading role in advancing these goals and has deeply engaged community-led organizations and members, as well as local and hospital leadership to identify economic mobility pathways and place-based solutions that are responsive to the needs of specific communities. Social capital, the connections to people and information, increases individuals' overall well-being and ability to both give and receive a range of supports that promote positive outcomes for caregivers and their children. By providing social capital, financial resources, and benefit maximization, this pilot will maximize assistance benefit; improve financial well-being and job retention. The participants may receive additional services, which could increase quality of life. Social capital will be increased in participants through the intervention which is six months of tailored coaching session offered by the Career Navigator. The Career Navigator will meet (either in person or online) with the participant and offer support with career planning and development, employee benefit maximization, financial well-being and management, flex fund access, and other resources. The quantitative component of this pilot will help the investigators better understand barriers and facilitators of economic mobility from the employee and employer perspectives. The participant employees will help with lessons learned through the development and implementation of the pilot, participant adherence, and challenges. The participant employer leaders will help with best practices, challenges, adaptation, and innovations. About 60 Boston Medical Center (BMC) employees living in one of the following seven zip codes (02119, 02121, 02122, 02124, 02125, 02126, 02130) will be invited to participate in this study. Survey instruments consist of valid and reliable scales which will be used to collect information on demographics, financial well-being, economic mobility, food security, housing security, health care utilization, child health outcomes, child development, employee physical and mental health. See attached survey instrument for detailed research questions. Surveys conducted after baseline will consist of questions regarding social determinants of health, financial well-being, and economic mobility. Will not include variables, such as demographics, that would remain unchanged from one time to the next. The baseline survey contains questions related to demographics, food security, housing stability, and participant physical and mental health, child health, childcare, participation in programs, financial well-being, and economic mobility. Between data collection periods, (baseline, 3, 6, 9, 12 and 18 months of enrollment), subjects will be working with the Career Navigator, who will build with each participant tools and resources customized to their needs. The intervention with the Career Navigator will have a total duration of 6 months for each of the study arms (Group 1 and Group 2). Baseline, the 6-month, 12-month and the 18-month, all individuals will be approached to participate in a survey. At Baseline, the Group 1 starts the intervention. At the 6-month, Group 1 finalizes intervention meanwhile Group 2 starts intervention, which finalizes at 12-month. At the 3- and the 9-month, all participants will be approached for qualitative focus groups and a quarterly check-in. At the 18-month, all the individuals will be approached for the final survey. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05963763
Study type Interventional
Source Boston Medical Center
Contact
Status Withdrawn
Phase N/A
Start date March 2024
Completion date September 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06313112 - Impact of Food Insecurity on Utilization of Maternal Healthcare Services and Birth Outcomes in Slums in Pune, India
Completed NCT03436589 - The Indiana SNAP-Ed Long-term Study N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06298253 - Behavioral Economics to Implement a Traffic Light Nutrition Ranking System: Study 2 N/A
Completed NCT03026608 - Green Cart Program Evaluation N/A
Recruiting NCT06019624 - Fresh Takes!: An Evaluation of the Impact of Receiving Fresh Food Boxes N/A
Recruiting NCT05745376 - Addressing Disparities in Food Access Among Young Children in Louisiana: A Farm to ECE Approach N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05601804 - TARGETing Healthy Weight Loss in the Context of Food Insecurity
Recruiting NCT05208671 - Nutrition to Optimize, Understand, and Restore Insulin Sensitivity in HIV for Oklahoma N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05048836 - Healthy Food First N/A
Completed NCT02835989 - Community Paramedicine at Home N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05978843 - Comparison of Produce Prescription Benefit Dosage N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT00821366 - Effective Aids Treatment and Support in the Free State (FEATS) Phase 3
Active, not recruiting NCT05424367 - Food Environment, Food Insecurity, and Health Behaviors in NH Hispanics
Completed NCT03847662 - Scaling up Small-Scale Food Processing to Promote Food Security Among Women Farmers in Rural Vietnam
Not yet recruiting NCT05854212 - Behavioral Economics to Implement Nutrition Ranking in Food Pantries N/A
Withdrawn NCT04017624 - Fresh Truck Pilot to Reduce Food Insecurity in a Medicaid ACO N/A
Completed NCT05076487 - Effects of Episodic Food Insecurity in African American Women With Obesity
Terminated NCT04968496 - Biobehavioral Mechanisms of Food Insecurity N/A
Completed NCT02925429 - PostNAPS: FI, Nutrition, and Psychosocial Health Among Women of Mixed HIV Status and Their Infants in Gulu, Uganda
Completed NCT02767141 - Coping Strategies Used by Food Insecure Households N/A