Surveys suggest that up to 80% of veterans with a persistent mental illness have a co-occurring substance use disorder. Substance abuse among this population is problematic and often results in poor engagement in treatment and thus, frequent hospitalizations and an unstable illness course. Regarding treatment engagement, data from a VA New Jersey facility indicated that 50% of those veterans discharged from the acute psychiatric hospital unit to outpatient care did not attend their initial screening appointment and another 30% dropped out within six weeks. To assist with the transition from inpatient to outpatient care, we previously developed an eight-week augmentation intervention entitled, Time-Limited Case Management (TLC). TLC integrates evidence-based interventions of 1) Dual Recovery Therapy; 2) Critical Time Intervention Case Management along with 3) Peer Support with the goal of assisting individuals with the transition from inpatient to outpatient care.
This study involved a randomized attention controlled trial of 102 individuals recruited on the inpatient psychiatry service at the New Jersey VA with a substance abuse disorder and a severe and persistent mental illness. Subjects were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: 1) treatment-as-usual in inpatient and outpatient services plus 8 weeks of Time Limited Care-Coordination (TLC), a brief linkage augmentation intervention or 2) treatment-as-usual along with 8 weeks of matched attention in the form of health education sessions (TAU+A). The data analytic plan included descriptive and advanced statistical analysis. Objective # 1: To determine whether those in TLC have better attendance in inpatient sessions compared to those receiving Treatment-As-Usual Plus Attention (TAU+A). Objective # 2: To determine whether those in TLC have better attendance in outpatient sessions compared to those receiving Treatment-As-Usual Plus Attention (TAU+A). Objective # 3: To determine whether TLC, compared to Treatment-As-Usual Plus Attention (TAU+A) reduces rehospitalizations and has an effect on the use of the Emergency Room use. Objective # 4: To determine whether TLC achieves a reduction in drug usage and related problems as compared to those receiving TAU+A. A total of 102 veterans were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: (1) Time Limited Care-Coordination (TLC), an eight-week co-occurring disorders intervention or (2) Treatment As Usual + Matched Attention (TAU+A) control condition in the form of health education sessions. However, both groups also received treatment as usual in inpatient and outpatient settings.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
102
This group will receive treatment as usual on Acute Psychiatry and at the Day Treatment Center along with an enhanced Time Limited Case Management community linkage intervention (TLC). Patients assigned to TLC will be offered enhanced services that begin on Acute Psychiatry and continue for a total of eight weeks through the community and Day Treatment Center transition.
This group will receive treatment as usual in Acute Psychiatry and at the Day Treatment Center in addition to participating in four group and one individual health education sessions (i.e., the attention control group). The length of the health education sessions (four group sessions and one individual session) will match the amount of attention provided to the treatment group. The health education sessions will cover topics such as nutrition, disease prevention, injury prevention, and healthy aging.
Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, Bedford
Bedford, Massachusetts, United States
VA New Jersey Health Care System, East Orange
East Orange, New Jersey, United States
Treatment Engagement
Number of inpatient and outpatient treatment sessions attended during the 8-week treatment period
Time frame: 8 weeks
Number of Days Engaged
Number of days veteran was involved with the program, from initial consent to last day of contact
Time frame: 8 weeks
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