Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic Clinical Trial
Official title:
Telephone Case Monitoring for Veterans With PTSD
The purpose of this study is to test whether providing PTSD patients additional support by telephone (in addition to usual outpatient care) after they discharge from residential treatment improves those patients' outcomes and keeps them out of the hospital longer.
Background: Poor compliance with aftercare may contribute to high rates of relapse and
rehospitalization among veterans who received residential treatment for posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). Telephone case monitoring has been shown to improve treatment adherence and
reduced relapse among patients with chronic medical and substance use disorders, but has not
been tested in PTSD patients.
Objectives: This multisite randomized controlled trial tested whether augmenting usual
aftercare with telephone monitoring improved resulted in 1) improved clinical outcomes (less
violence, substance use, and PTSD symptoms; 2) longer time to rehospitalization; 3) better
compliance with aftercare in the year after discharge from residential treatment for PTSD.
Methods: This trial recruited 837 subjects from 6 PTSD residential treatment programs at 5
VA medical centers, 94.7% of the 884 projected. Patients who completed at least 14 days of
residential PTSD treatment and discharged to VA outpatient care were eligible to
participate. Subjects were randomized to usual aftercare care (n = 425) or usual aftercare
plus biweekly telephone case monitoring calls during the first three months after discharge
(n = 412). Telephone case monitors assessed current problems, encouraged treatment
adherence, provided problem-solving support, and alerted providers to emergent care needs.
Patient self-report measures of psychiatric symptoms, substance use, and violence were
obtained at intake to residential treatment and 4 months (69% completion rate) and 12 months
(64% completion rate) after discharge. Retention was lower than our planned 70% to 75% rate
due to difficulty locating some patients who moved (even their collateral informants did not
know where they were) and 45 participants asking to discontinue due to lack of time (n =
10), general dissatisfaction with VA (n = 6), distress during phone calls (n = 5),
dissatisfaction with compensation (n = 1), or no specified reason (n = 24). Treatment
utilization data was obtained from the VA National Patient Care Database.
Intent-to-treat analyses used mixed modeling to compare clinical outcomes in the telephone
monitoring and usual care groups and 4 and 12 months after discharge. Survival analysis was
used to compare conditions on time to rehospitalization. Having a slightly
smaller-than-intended sample size resulted in modest reductions in statistical power, e.g.,
power to detect the expected d = .25 effect on PTSD outcomes was reduced from about 90% to
82%, and power to detect the anticipated W = .105 difference in rehospitalization rates was
reduced from 88% to 85%. Secondary analyses assessed whether differences in outcomes between
the telephone case monitoring and usual care groups were mediated by attending more
outpatient visits and completing more medication refills. Exploratory analyses examined
whether the effect of telephone support on the clinical outcome measures, number of
treatment visits, and medication refills was moderated by number of outpatient mental health
visits in the prior year, distance from clinic, treatment expectancies, therapeutic
alliance, or co-occurring substance use problems.
Results: Treatment utilization (mental health visits and medication refills) did not vary
between treatment conditions. Clinical outcomes and time to rehospitalization did not differ
between conditions. Contrary to our assumptions, patients in the usual care condition had
high engagement in aftercare following discharge from residential treatment, completing an
average of 36 outpatient mental health visits in 12 months. We speculate that telephone care
coordination has little impact for patients who are already high utilizers of care.
Status: Enrollment, intervention, data collection, and primary analyses are completed.
Primary results have been published in Psychiatric Services (Rosen, Tiet, Harris et al.,
2013) and two secondary papers have been published in the Journal of Traumatic Stress
(Belsher, Tiet, Garvert, & Rosen, 2012; Rosen, Adler, & Tiet, 2013).
A CDMRP-funded study extending this approach to PTSD outpatients at the Durham, Puget Sound
and Palo Alto VA medical centers has recently been completed. Initial results of that second
trial suggest that telephone care management improved treatment attendance but had weak
effects on outcomes.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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