Homelessness Clinical Trial
— TIPOfficial title:
The Identity Project: An Evaluation of an Identity Capital Intervention for Young People Transitioning Out of Homelessness
NCT number | NCT03772522 |
Other study ID # | 18-002 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | April 1, 2018 |
Est. completion date | August 6, 2019 |
Verified date | June 2023 |
Source | Unity Health Toronto |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Understanding how to create successful pathways out of homelessness is crucial. Thirty young people (aged 18 - 26 years) who have transitioned out of homelessness within the past three years will be offered scholarships to participate in a six week intervention that focuses on building identity capital (sense of purpose and control, self-efficacy and self-esteem) and providing career direction. The intervention will be designed and carried out by dk Leadership - an established, highly successful leadership and counseling centre in Toronto with a track record of significantly improving the life trajectories of teens and adults. Importantly, study participants will be incorporated into the centre's current programming, meaning the intervention will be held at a location not associated with homelessness. Study participants will be collaboratively recruited by dk Leadership and Covenant House Toronto - Canada's largest agency for street-involved and homeless youth. This impact and process evaluation aims to address critical gaps in knowledge about transition-related supports by asking whether and how an identity capital intervention delivered outside the social service sector impacts the life-trajectories of formerly homeless young people. Particular attention will be paid to whether this intervention shows promise as an unconventional way to tackle poverty and improve social inclusion. It is hypothesize that, for the primary quantitative outcome measures of hope, community integration, social connectedness, and self-esteem: 1. Significant improvements in the mean scores of the intervention group compared to the delayed intervention comparison group immediately post-intervention will be observed. 2. Significant improvements in the mean scores of both groups (intervention and delayed intervention) immediately post-intervention will be observed. 3. These significant improvements will be sustained in both groups for at least three months post-intervention.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 27 |
Est. completion date | August 6, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | August 6, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 26 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Between 18-26 years of age - Left homelessness within the last 3 years (youth living in supportive housing contexts (e.g., transitional housing) will be considered to have left homelessness) - Currently not homeless (youth in supportive or transitional housing are eligible) - A concerted effort will be made to recruit young people facing additional identity-related challenges like newcomer and racialized youth, Indigenous youth, and youth who belong to the LGBTQ2S community. Exclusion Criteria: - Not fluent in English - Cannot provide informed consent - Cannot commit to attending two full-day workshops and four half-day group coaching sessions over the course of six weeks (missing more than one workshop and two coaching sessions will disqualify participants from the study) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | St. Michael's Hospital | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Unity Health Toronto | Covenant House Toronto, dk Leadership, Ontario Trillium Foundation |
Canada,
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* Note: There are 37 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Mean Change From Baseline in Hopelessness as Measured by the Beck Hopelessness Scale | Assessed using Beck's Hopelessness Scale, a 20-item scale which measures motivation, expectations, and feelings about the future (internal consistency a = .93). The total scoring range is 0-20, with 0-3 = no or minimal hopelessness, 4-8 = mild hopelessness, 9-14 = moderate hopelessness- requires monitoring, and 15+ = severe hopelessness- suicide risk.
Participants' scores at baseline will be compared with their scores post-intervention to detect changes in levels of hopelessness. The change in scores over time will describe the general trajectory of hopelessness. |
Assessed at 6 weeks pre-baseline (for the delayed intervention group only), at baseline (immediately pre-intervention), immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Primary | Mean Change From Baseline in Community Integration (Psychological and Physical) Scores as Measured by the Community Integration Scale (CIS) | Assessed using the Community Integration Scale, an 11-item scale which measures behavioural (e.g., participation in activities) and psychological (e.g., sense of belonging) aspects of community integration. The CIS includes a physical subscale (with scores ranging from 0-7) and a psychological subscale (with scores ranging from 4-20). Higher scores indicate greater community integration. This scale was used extensively in the Chez Soi/At Home study, but psychometric properties have yet to be reported.
Participants' scores at baseline will be compared with their scores post-intervention to detect changes in levels of community integration. The change in scores over time will describe the general trajectory of community integration. |
Assessed at 6 weeks pre-baseline (for the delayed intervention group only), at baseline (immediately pre-intervention), immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Primary | Mean Change From Baseline in Social Connectedness Scores as Measured by the Social Connectedness Scale (SCS) | Measured using the Social Connected Scale, a 20-item scale which measures belongingness - the degree to which people feel connected to others (internal consistency a = .92). Scores range from 20-120, with higher scores indicating greater social connectedness.
Participants' scores at baseline will be compared with their scores post-intervention to detect changes in social connectedness. The change in scores over time will describe the general trajectory of social connectedness. |
Assessed at 6 weeks pre-baseline (for the delayed intervention group only), at baseline (immediately pre-intervention), immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Primary | Mean Change From Baseline in Self-esteem Scores as Measured by the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSS) | Assessed using the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale, a 10-item scale which measures of global self-worth (internal consistency a = .77 - .88). Scores range from 0-30. A score of <15 is categorized as low self-esteem, and 15-30 is categorized as normal self-esteem.
Participants' scores at baseline will be compared with their scores post-intervention to detect changes in self-esteem. The change in scores over time will describe the general trajectory of self-esteem. |
Assessed at 6 weeks pre-baseline (for the delayed intervention group only), at baseline (immediately pre-intervention), immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Change in Vocational Participation/Employment as Assessed by a Questionnaire From Baseline to 9-Months | Acquirement of meaningful employment will be assessed. Participants will be prompted to answer questions about their current employment status, intensity of employment, and type of employment in the questionnaire. The change in the number of participants engaging in employment over time at the aggregate level will be assessed. | Assessed at baseline (immediately pre-intervention) and 9 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Change in Academic Participation/Educational Attainment as Assessed by a Questionnaire From Baseline to 9-Months | Participants will be prompted to answer questions about their current educational pursuit, and type of schooling or training program in a questionnaire. The change in the number of participants engaging in education over time on the aggregate will be assessed. | Assessed at baseline (immediately pre-intervention) and 9 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Number of Themes Related to Change in Career Awareness Informed by Focus Groups With Participants | This outcome will describe the general trajectory of career awareness. Self-awareness, confidence, ability to articulate career goals, and understanding of how to achieve career goals will be assessed in focus groups. The questions posed during the focus groups will be guided by the evaluation objectives, but will be conversational and exploratory in nature with particular attention to identity capital, life-trajectories, and social inclusion. All will be conducted by the co-investigator at locations most convenient for the study participants, and will be audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. All focus groups will be analyzed together; the themes identified from the analysis will be presented as one data entry. | 60 - 90 minute focus groups at each of the following timepoints: immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Number of Themes Related to Change in Knowledge and Use of Soft Skills Informed by Focus Groups With Participants | Acquirement of soft skills such as motivation, goal setting, self-discipline, and organization will be assessed in focus groups. The questions posed during the focus groups will be guided by the evaluation objectives, but will be conversational and exploratory in nature with particular attention to identity capital, life-trajectories, and social inclusion. All will be conducted by the co-investigator at locations most convenient for the study participants, and will be audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. All focus groups will be analyzed together; the themes identified from the analysis will be presented as one data entry. | 60 - 90 minute focus groups at each of the following timepoints: immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Number of Themes Related to Participant Perspectives of Intervention Barriers and Facilitators, as Informed by Focus Groups With Participants | In focus groups, youth will be prompted to discuss the strengths and drawbacks of conventional programs for youth transitioning out of homelessness. These evaluations will be compared to this intervention to determine what aspects of programs youth find most helpful, and which could be improved upon. The questions posed during the focus groups will be guided by the evaluation objectives, but will be conversational and exploratory in nature with particular attention to identity capital, life-trajectories, and social inclusion.All will be conducted by the co-investigator at locations most convenient for the study participants, and will be audio recorded and transcribed verbatim. All focus groups will be analyzed together; the themes identified from the analysis will be presented as one data entry. | 60 - 90 minute focus groups at each of the following timepoints: immediately post-intervention, 3 months post-intervention, 6 months post-intervention, and 9 months post-intervention |
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