Homeless Persons Clinical Trial
Official title:
Engaging Homeless Veterans in Primary Care
The objectives of this study are to test an evidence-based model for improving primary and preventive care engagement among homeless veterans not currently receiving care and to demonstrate the additive benefit of primary care-based treatment engagement by this population.
One out of three homeless men and nearly one quarter of all homeless adults are veterans.
This translates to almost 200,000 veterans being homeless on any given night. The Department
of Veteran Affairs (VA) is a major service provider to homeless persons and has developed
several very successful and innovative programs that have been effective in securing
housing, economic stability and needed services for these men and women. However, despite
these efforts in many communities, veterans are not accessing these services despite
aggressive outreach and state-of-the art programming. We are conducting a prospective
randomized controlled trial to test the hypothesis that a personalized health assessment
linked to community outreach is more likely to both engage the homeless veteran in a primary
care based chronic disease management model and to sustain that care and associated behavior
changes necessary to exit homelessness. The key questions to be addressed in this study are:
(1) Will a community-based health-oriented outreach increase health seeking behavior in the
intervention group?; (2) can initial engagement be sustained in a continuity care model in
this population?; (3) will this intervention facilitate changes/improvements in health
seeking behavior that include participation in substance abuse treatment care, compliance
with mental health care, and enrollment in VA-based employment/financial support programs?;
and (4) can this intervention impact chronic disease management of key cardiovascular risk
indicators that disproportionately affect homeless persons?; and (5) do any observed changes
correlate with serial behavioral measures and qualitative assessments?
Our working hypothesis is that a targeted outreach to homeless persons that capitalizes on
either established or newly realized physical health concerns to affect both health seeking
behavior and sustained behavior change. It is grounded in two complementary behavioral
models: the Behavioral Model for Vulnerable Populations and the body of research describing
intrinsic versus extrinsic motivators for sustained behavior change.
Two hundred and eighty homeless veterans will be randomized to receive either a personalized
health assessment based outreach or usual care (social work/housing focused) outreach.
Baseline assessments will include demographics, medical, mental health and substance use
co-morbidities, pre-intervention health seeking behavior, readiness for behavior change
(URICA), motivation for health care. Serial assessments at months 1, and 6 will assess
evolving readiness and motivation as well as changes in their homeless status (sheltering,
employment/income, etc.) Actual utilization of services will be assessed using the CPRS
electronic medical records.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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