Recent needs assessments suggest that difficulties exist in care coordination between emergency medical services (EMS) systems and primary care for injured adolescents with alcohol problems and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This project will implement, evaluate, and disseminate the adolescent trauma support service model program that aims to enhance coordination between EMS systems and primary care/community services.
Goal 1: To coordinate care from EMS systems to primary care for injured adolescents. Objective 1: To increase rates of connection to primary care providers to 55% for model program adolescents, compared to an anticipated connection rate of 25% in adolescents assigned to standard care, by 2010. Goal 2: To reduce alcohol consumption over the course of the year after injury. Objective 2: To reduce rates of alcohol consumption by 25% in adolescents assigned to the model program, compared to adolescents assigned to the standard care, by 2010. Goal 3: To reduce adolescent PTSD symptoms over the course of the year after injury. Objective 3: To achieve statistically significant reductions in PTSD symptoms in model program patients, compared to adolescents assigned to standard care, by 2010. Activities Undertaken to Meet Project Goals: We propose to implement and evaluate an innovative model program, the adolescent trauma support service, that aims to improve the quality of care for injured adolescents with problematic alcohol use and high levels of PTSD symptoms by enhancing coordination of care between EMS systems and primary care and community services. All injured adolescents ages 12-18 presenting to the Harborview Medical Center with injuries so severe that they require inpatient admission and/or 24 hour observation in the emergency department, will be screened for alcohol use and PTSD. Adolescents who screen into the study will be randomly assigned to the adolescent trauma support service or standard care. Two trauma support specialists will meet each injured adolescent and available family members by the ED gurney or inpatient bedside in order to elicit and address each patient/family's unique constellation of post-injury concerns. Next, the adolescent trauma support specialist will help to coordinate care received within the EMS system with primary care providers. The trauma support specialists will also have the capacity to deliver evidence-based motivational interviewing interventions targeting reductions in adolescent alcohol use. The trauma support specialists will link patients and families to evidence-based PTSD treatment through primary care and community resources. Program evaluation will include a comparison of the outcomes of adolescents randomly assigned to the adolescent trauma support program with those of adolescents assigned to standard care. Adolescents in the model program and standard care will be compared on the presence or absence of post-injury primary care visits and reductions in alcohol use and PTSD symptoms over the course of the year after injury. Nationwide dissemination activities of program evaluation results will include the publication of manuscripts in peer reviewed journals and presentations at national meetings by members of the interdisciplinary collaborative group that includes pediatric, mental health and surgical providers.
The study team will be organized into an adolescent trauma support service. The adolescent trauma support service will fundamentally restructure psychosocial care by integrating post-injury medical treatment with alcohol and PTSD detection and treatment. The adolescent trauma support specialists will deliver a stepped collaborative care intervention to adolescents and their families over the 6-12 months post-injury.
Harborview Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States
Number of Patients With High Levels of Adolescent PTSD Symptoms
Patients with symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of PTSD on the UCLA PTSD Reaction Index were counted. The UCLA PTSD-RI can be used to create an algorithm consistent with a diagnosis of PTSD by rating 1 intrusive, 3 avoidant, and 2 arousal symptoms with a rating of moderate severity. The PTSD-RI is scored on a scale from 0 (none of the time) - 4 (most of the time) with a \> = 2 "some of the time" denoting this cutoff for moderate severity. This algorithm was used to identify patients with high PTSD symptom levels consistent with a diagnosis of PTSD.
Time frame: Baseline (injury), then 2, 5, and 12 months post-injury
Number of Patients Who Self-reported Alcohol Consumption or Drug Use
Any self-reported alcohol or drug use using one yes or no question
Time frame: Baseline (injury), and 2, 5, and 12 months post-injury
Percentage of Asolescents Linked to Primary Care During the Study
Percentage of adolescents self-reporting one or more primary care visits over the course of the 12-months after the injury
Time frame: Up to12 months post-injury
Percentage of Adolescents Who Self-reported Weapon Carriage
Self-reported carrying of knife, gun, club or other weapon by adolescent
Time frame: Baseline (injury), then 2, 5, and 12 months post-injury
Number of Patients Experiencing High-Level Depressive Symptoms
The investigators used the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) to identify symptoms consistent with a diagnosis of depression on the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire depression screen. Scores range from 1 to 27 with higher scores representing worse outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline (injury), then 2, 5, and 12 months post-injury
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
120