Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Justice-Involved Veterans (DBT-J) is a comprehensive, integrative program distinctively designed to address the range of mental health, substance use, case management, and legal needs of Veterans with current or ongoing criminal justice involvement. Data from two prior clinical trials attest to the program's feasibility and acceptability and preliminarily suggest participation in the program may yield meaningful improvements in risk for criminal behavior and resolution of high-priority case management needs. However, continued research is needed to further investigate the program's efficacy. This Phase III clinical trial aims to investigate the superiority of DBT-J over a supportive group therapy treatment in decreasing risk of future criminal behavior and increasing psychosocial functioning. Secondary and exploratory aims will also investigate superiority of DBT-J in improving secondary treatment targets, potential differential efficacy across special-interest Veteran subgroups, and long-term consequences of program participation.


Clinical Trial Description

Despite substantial efforts to curb Veteran suicide, Veterans continue to die by suicide at rates that far exceed their civilian peers. To date, substantial resources have been invested into understanding and treating underlying risk factors and precipitants of Veteran suicide. However, criminal justice involvement remains an under-examined and under-assessed risk factor for Veteran suicide. Accumulating research suggests justice-involved Veterans are a high-risk, high need population, particularly within the Veterans Health Administration. For example, 11% of Veteran suicides are precipitated by legal troubles; 79% of Veterans receiving VA supportive housing assistance have a history of one or more arrests; and 58% of Veterans receiving outpatient VHA substance use treatment have a history of three or more arrests. Risk for suicide among justice-involved Veterans is particularly elevated among those with co-occurring difficulties, such as mental health concerns and/or housing instability. Adequately addressing Veteran suicide - both for justice-involved Veterans and the broader Veteran population - therefore likely requires interventions to address the legal and co-occurring difficulties of at-risk Veterans. Dialectical Behavior Therapy for Justice-Involved Veterans (DBT-J) is distinctively designed to address these range of needs faced by justice-involved Veterans, including heightened suicide risk, antisocial behaviors, mental health and substance use concerns, community-based structural barriers, and case management difficulties. Combining elements of three prominent, evidence-based models, DBT-J provides 16 weeks of group psychotherapy, case management services, and measurement-based care to Veterans with ongoing or recent criminal justice involvement. Data from two prior clinical trials attest to the feasibility and acceptability of DBT-J within VHA behavioral health settings. Although preliminary, data also suggest participation in DBT-J may yield meaningful reductions in risk for future criminal behavior and resolution of high-priority case management needs. Continued research, however, is needed to further investigate the program's efficacy. Toward these aims, this Phase III clinical trial will: 1. Primary Aims 1-2: Assess the superiority of DBT-J over supportive group therapy in decreasing risk of future criminal behavior and increasing psychosocial functioning. 2. Secondary Aim: Assess the superiority of DBT-J over supportive group therapy in improving secondary treatment targets (i.e., suicidal ideation, criminogenic thinking, psychological distress, substance use, case management needs, quality of life, resilience, suicide-related behavior, and criminal recidivism). 3. Exploratory Aims 1-2: Assess for differential efficacy of DBT-J across high-priority JIV subgroups (i.e., violent versus nonviolent most recent offense type, presence/absence of a substance use disorder, and presence/absence of a severe mental illness); assess long-term impact of DBT-J participation (versus participation in supportive group therapy) on primary and secondary treatment targets. A total of 200 Veterans with current or recent involvement in the criminal justice system will be recruited from the greater New York City, New York and Denver, Colorado areas to participate in this clinical trial. Veterans will be randomly assigned to receive either 16 weeks of DBT-J or 16 weeks of supportive group therapy followed by a 36 week observational period. Comprehensive assessments of Veteran risk for future criminal justice involvement, psychosocial functioning, suicidal ideation, criminogenic thinking, psychological distress, substance use, case management needs, quality of life, resilience, suicide-related behavior, and criminal recidivism will be administered periodically throughout study completion. Analyses of variance will then be used to compare study conditions on primary and secondary treatment targets and to compare high-priority participant subgroups on primary and secondary treatment targets. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05974553
Study type Interventional
Source VA Office of Research and Development
Contact Emily R Edwards, PhD
Phone (718) 584-9000
Email emily.edwards5@va.gov
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 1, 2024
Completion date October 31, 2027

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04140942 - Improving Employment and Reducing Recidivism Among Prison Offenders Via Virtual Interview Training Tool (MICHR) N/A
Completed NCT02990026 - Specialty Mental Health Probation in North Carolina N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03937128 - Improving Employment and Reducing Recidivism Among Prison Offenders Via Virtual Interview Training Tool N/A
Recruiting NCT06094972 - The Effectiveness of A-CRA in Compulsory Institutional Care for Youth N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05729945 - Catholic Health Initiatives (CHI) St. Joseph's Children Home Visiting Longitudinal Study N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT01088542 - The Community Youth Development Study: A Test of Communities That Care N/A
Completed NCT03940716 - Project IntERact Study N/A
Recruiting NCT04850274 - Using Re-inforcement Learning to Automatically Adapt a Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI) for Reducing Adolescent Violence Involvement N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT04499079 - Alliances to Disseminate Addiction Prevention and Treatment (ADAPT) N/A
Recruiting NCT03883646 - Mindfulness for Alcohol Abusing Offenders N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05109689 - A Randomized Controlled Trial of ACT-P Versus T4C for Community Reentry N/A
Recruiting NCT05081934 - Feasibility, Acceptability and Preliminary Treatment Effects of A-CRA for Youth in Compulsory Institutional Care N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03812484 - An Evaluation of the NJSPB SCF Project for Opioid-Involved High-Risk Parolees N/A
Recruiting NCT05665179 - Removing Barriers: Community Partnering for Innovative Solutions to the Opioid Crisis N/A
Recruiting NCT05845333 - Neurocognitive Abnormalities in Stimulant Abuse Among High-Risk Women
Not yet recruiting NCT04982627 - A Brief Negotiation Interview Chatbot to Improve Buprenorphine Engagement Among Justice-Involved Individuals N/A
Completed NCT04899934 - Feasibility of Mobile and Technology Assisted Aftercare Services for Crisis Stabilization Units N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03826420 - Swift, Certain, and Fair: Reducing Recidivism and Improving Outcomes for Alcohol and Drug Users on State Parole N/A