The provision of medical services in an inner city Emergency Department (ED) provides a critical opportunity to identify and characterize future timing and pattern of service use among youth with drug use, who may be missed in school-based samples, and who may not yet be in the criminal justice system. Currently, there is a paucity of data on the timing, pattern, barriers, and trajectory of youth with multiple risks (illicit drug use and ED visit for acute violence related injury) in terms of their intersection with health services (substance use treatment, mental health, medical) and criminal justice system, which limits the development of optimal timing and setting for interventions. Youth treated in the ED may have exacerbated rates of illicit drug use, and other risk behaviors (i.e. delinquency, HIV risk behaviors, weapon carriage) and different trajectories of outcomes and interactions with service use sectors based on presentation for intentional injury as compared to other complaints (medical, unintentional injuries). Understanding the outcomes and service utilization among inner-city youth with drug use with and without acute violent injury is critically important in developing prevention and treatment services to address these multiple risk factors. The investigators propose a prospective observational study over a two-year period to identify a high risk group of youth with past year illicit drug use (N=650) seeking care in an inner city ED. The specific aims of the study, chosen to obtain data necessary to determine the location and content of subsequent interventions, are: (1) To describe characteristics of youth (ages 14-24; n=650) who report illicit drug use presenting to an urban ED for an acute violent injury (n=350), compared to youth with drug use who seek non-violence related ED care (n=300), including demographic characteristics, problem severity (e.g., substance use, violence, HIV risk behaviors, etc.), enabling factors, and service utilization (i.e., substance use treatment, mental health, and medical); (2) To identify the trajectories of participants' interactions with health services during the two years following their ED visit and the key characteristics (i.e., predisposing, enabling, and need factors) associated with types of service use (substance abuse treatment, mental health, and medical/ ED) and barriers to these services; and, (3) To measure two-year outcomes for this cohort and to identify key demographic and clinical characteristics of youth with drug use, who have poor outcomes in the two years after ED visit for intentional injury and other medical care.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
638
Hurley Medical Center Emergency Department
Flint, Michigan, United States
substance use as assessed with both the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview
Time frame: Change from baseline substance use at 24 month
substance use as assessed with the National Institute on Drug Abuse- Modified Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test
Time frame: Change from baseline substance use at 24 month
violence behaviors as assessed with the modified Conflict Tactic Scale
Time frame: Change from baseline violence behaviors at 24 month
HIV risk behaviors as assessed with the Risk Assessment Battery
Time frame: Change from baseline HIV risk behaviors at 24 month
trajectories of participants' interactions with health services during the two years following their ED visit for an acute violent injury or for non-violence related care
Services will include substance abuse treatment, mental health services, and medical services including ED recidivism and HIV testing as assessed through chart review
Time frame: through the study completion, over 24 months
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