Social Determinants of Health Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized Controlled Trial to Link Emergency Department Patients to Navigation Services for Enrollment in Public Benefits
The objective of this randomized controlled trial is to test the effect of screening patients in Penn Medicine Emergency Departments for eligibility of public benefits programs and using text messages post-discharge to connect patients to benefits enrollment specialists at Benefits Data Trust (BDT). Eligible patients will be randomly selected to receive text messages for two weeks after Emergency Department discharge with the phone number to speak with a benefits enrollment specialist at BDT. The number of calls to the BDT phone line and the number of submitted applications to public benefits programs will be compared between patients receiving a summary flyer with the phone number for BDT and the text message intervention to connect with BDT in comparison to an active control group who receives only a summary flyer with the phone number for BDT.
Every year, Philadelphians fail to claim approximately $450 million dollars in federal and state benefits1. Across the United States, unclaimed benefits are estimated at approximately $60 billion1. These benefits include support for food, housing, healthcare, economic support, and others that can make a significant impact on well-being, upward mobility, and financial stability. The reasons that benefits are unclaimed are numerous, including lack of awareness about benefit programs and eligibility criteria, lack of agency and self-efficacy in completing expansive application requirements and organizing the necessary paperwork, and navigating the psychological costs of stigma associated with seeking public benefits2. In accordance with incentive structures developed as a result of the Affordable Care Act, health care systems have demonstrated value in screening for patients' social needs and creating partnerships with public service agencies to connect patients to social services to improve individual and population health and reduce health care disparities3-5. Patients presenting to emergency departments are more likely to possess unmet social needs6-8. Thus, it is critical for health care providers in emergency departments to effectively identify patients' social needs and connect patients to social services agencies that can provide both immediate and long-term assistance through the connection to public benefits programs. Benefits Data Trust (BDT), a benefits support organization based in Philadelphia, has a long track record of success in consistently securing benefits for individuals with unmet social needs. BDT assists individuals with the completion and submission of applications for 19 public benefits programs (e.g., Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, and the Pharmaceutical Contract for the Elderly) via different channels, including web, phone, text, and in-person support services. Trained outreach specialists are knowledgeable about the intricacies of benefits applications and eligibility requirements, and support is available in multiple languages. Building trust with clients and serving vulnerable underserved communities is a central focus for outreach specialists. For services that they do not provide assistance for, BDT is also staffed to provide warm handoffs to help connect individuals to relevant organizations. The focus of this proposal is to test whether patients identified in Penn Medicine Emergency Departments (ED) randomized to receive a warm handoff text messaging intervention are more likely to connect to study-specific BDT phone line and submit more applications for public benefits programs in comparison to patients who only receive a summary flyer with the BDT study-specific phone line upon discharge from the Emergency Department. We will first conduct a pilot study with 30 participants to assess the design efficacy and implementation success of the text messaging intervention. After which, we will concurrently launch a two-arm prospective intervention randomized controlled trial that is expected to occur over 6 months in Penn Medicine Emergency Departments. The study will use Way To Health, a research information technology platform at the University of Pennsylvania used previously in digital health engagement clinical trials. We propose to first survey patients to determine their eligibility for public benefits programs. Second, patients who are eligible for at least 1 of the 21 benefits programs to which BDT either provides direct application support or provides referrals to agency websites to complete applications will be randomly selected to either receive a flyer with the study-specific BDT phone number to apply for public benefits programs (active control) or receive a text messaging intervention for two weeks after leaving the ED with instructions to connect to the BDT study-specific phone line in addition to the flyer. Patients randomized to the intervention arm will receive an initial text message one-day post-discharge from the ED with instructions for connecting with BDT and will receive subsequent reminders to connect with BDT on Days 3, 7, and 14 post-discharge. Patients who indicate that they have successfully connected with BDT on Day 3 will not receive intervention messages on Days 7 and 14. All patients, both those randomized to the control and intervention groups, will receive an end-of-study survey on Day 14 post-discharge from the ED to ask patients if they connected with BDT, assess the patient's experience in the research study, and provide a reminder about the number to connect with BDT. Insights from this randomized controlled trial will inform future work evaluating benefits enrollment outcomes, the relationship between benefits enrollment and health care outcomes, and variations in health services use among patients connected to BDT in the ED. ;
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