Injuries Clinical Trial
Official title:
American Indian and Alaska Native Health Disparities Staying Connected: Trauma Center to Tribal Community Linkage for Physically Injured American Indian Patients
The purpose of this study is to provide American Indian trauma patients, treated at the Harborview Level 1 urban trauma center, compassionate and culturally sensitive care and to link them to care in their distant tribal communities. The specific aims include 1) interview Native healers to gather information on culture-specific aspects of recovery from traumatic injury and on linking care to tribal communities, 2) conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of the intervention. The investigators hypothesize that intervention patients will demonstrate greater improvement than controls in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, depression, functioning, diagnoses, and fewer new injuries during the 6 months after the index injury.
American Indians are at a greater risk for traumatic life events than the general population
and compared to Whites they have a 2.04 (95% CI 1.11, 3.54) fold increased risk of Post
Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Among more than 2,900 injured trauma survivors
treated at 69 hospitals nationwide, American Indians had the highest risk of all
racial/ethnic groups of developing symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of PTSD 12 months
after injury. Similarly, among 269 traumatically injured patients hospitalized at 2 level 1
trauma centers in the Western U.S., PTSD and peritraumatic dissociative symptoms were
significantly more frequent among American Indians compared to Whites.
Nine percent of 6,000 injured trauma survivors admitted annually to the Harborview Level 1
trauma center are American Indian. Approximately 40 percent of these patients live more than
50 miles from the trauma center, including tribal communities in Eastern Washington and the
Olympic Peninsula. Through prior work, researchers have found that care management
interventions can reduce PTSD symptoms among diverse injured urban patients. Investigators
from the Center of Excellence suggest that American Indian trauma survivors may have unique
culture-specific idioms for posttraumatic distress (e.g. "wounded spirit"), and that trauma
interventions with indigenous approaches may be productively applied to patients suffering
from posttraumatic distress.(5)
In an effort to reduce the risk of PTSD and other general symptoms of trauma among American
Indians, we plan to conduct a pilot study to develop and evaluate an American Indian culture
specific care management intervention, Staying Connected.
Based on the Trauma Survivors and Support Study (TSOS), the purpose of Staying Connected is
to provide American Indian trauma patients, treated at the Harborview Level 1 urban trauma
center, compassionate and culturally sensitive care and to link them to care in their
distant tribal communities. The specific aims include 1) interview Native healers to gather
information on culture-specific aspects of recovery from traumatic injury and on linking
care to tribal communities, 2) conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the
implementation and effectiveness of the intervention. We hypothesize that intervention
patients will demonstrate greater improvement than controls in PTSD symptoms, depression,
functioning, diagnoses, and fewer new injuries during the 6 months after the index injury.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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