In this study, the investigators are interested in learning how patients feel about and are impacted by a new approach for the primary care team to use to talk to patients about heart disease and health behaviors. The investigators were looking to recruit around 40 Veterans from Buffalo and Syracuse to be in this study. What it entailed is being randomly assigned to one of two conditions. If patients are assigned to the first condition, their upcoming primary care appointment will be extended by about 5 minutes because a Health Educator will join the end of that appointment. If they are assigned to the second condition they would have their typical primary care appointment. Beyond that, both conditions are quite similar. They will have an individual meeting following the primary care appointment with the Health Educator, two phone booster meetings at 2 and 4 weeks, and information about an optional app that they have the choice to use to help them track some health behaviors.
Many Veterans (30.4%) with cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) continue to engage in behaviors that increase risk of cardiovascular events and early mortality, such as smoking or hazardous drinking. While the VA has several programs designed to help Veterans quit smoking or quit/reduce drinking, there is a gap in service for Veterans who are not ready for change-based treatments but continue to smoke or drink hazardously. VA Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACTs) screen all patients annually for alcohol and tobacco use, and thus the PACT platform is an ideal way to reach Veterans with CVDs who smoke and/or drink hazardously. Through the Primary Care Mental Health Integration (PCMHI) initiative, mental and behavioral health providers are embedded to provide effective, evidence-based, Veteran-centered, behavioral health interventions for a variety of co-occurring behavioral health concerns and medical problems. Educational and self-monitoring interventions are evidence-based and increase substance users' intentions to make a behavior change, and additionally improve patient factors including engagement, willingness to accept behavioral health referrals, and self-management strategies. This research proposal focuses on adapting elements of these evidence-based interventions specifically for a PACT-based VA setting to appeal to Veterans not yet ready to change smoking and/or drinking. This intervention aims to increase intention to change and may improve rates of cessation and engagement with change-based programs. The intervention will fill a gap in care and potentially improve the health and longevity of Veterans seen in PACT. The intervention, called CARE, will be piloted in two formats: 1) that includes a conjoint meeting between a PACT medical provider and a behavioral health provider; and 2) only with a behavioral health provider.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
44
Behavioral intervention including -30 minute meeting alone with behavioral health educator (in person or virtual using VA's VVC system) 4 weeks of optional self monitoring using an app of substance use behavior, mood, other behavioral processes 2 optional 15-minute phone calls with behavioral health educator
VA Western New York Healthcare System, Buffalo, NY
Buffalo, New York, United States
Syracuse VA Medical Center, Syracuse, NY
Syracuse, New York, United States
Readiness to Change Drinking OR Smoking
Readiness to Change Questionnaire. This is a standardized measure (Heather and Rollnick, 1993) with 12 items measuring how ready an individual is to make a change to a behavior (e.g., drinking, smoking). The scale contains subscales that can indicate which Stage of Change (Precontemplation, Contemplation, or Action) an individual is in during the time of measurement. It is scored by seeing which subscale an individual is highest on at the time of measurement (i.e., their highest subscale score among the three stages; if two subscale scores are equal then the higher stage is chosen).
Time frame: 6 weeks post intervention
Readiness to Change Drinking OR Smoking
This is a 1-10 scale wherein participants are asked to rate their readiness to change drinking or smoking from 1-10 with 1 being not ready/not considering change up to 10, being taking steps toward change. This scale is based off of numerous "Readiness Rulers" published in the motivational interviewing literature.
Time frame: 6 weeks post intervention
Cigarettes Per Day
This is one item from a two-item smoking quantity-frequency measure. Veterans were asked (1) on how many days of the last 28 did they smoke any cigarettes; and (2) on the days they smoked, how many they smoked. The second of those is reported here. The number corresponds directly to the average of how many cigarettes they smoked per smoking day in the past 28. 1=1 cigarettes per day, 2=2 cigarettes per day, etc.
Time frame: 6 weeks post intervention
Drinking Days
This is one item from a two-item drinking quantity-frequency measure. Veterans were asked on how many days of the last 28 did they have at least one standard drink of alcohol. The number corresponds directly to the average of how many days they had a standard drink of alcohol in the past 28 days. 1=1 day out of 28 that they drank alcohol, 2=2 days per week that they drank alcohol, etc.
Time frame: 6 weeks post intervention
Drinks Per Drinking Day
This is one item from a two-item drinking quantity-frequency measure. Veterans were asked (1) on how many days of the last 28 did they drink a standard drink of alcohol; and (2) on the days they drank, how many standard drinks they had. The second of those is reported here. The number corresponds directly to the average of how many drinks they consumed per drinking day in the past 28. 1=1 drink per drinking day, 2=2 drinks per drinking day, etc.
Time frame: Six weeks post intervention
Patient Satisfaction Survey
This was a Patient Satisfaction Survey that assess for satisfaction with the healthcare system assessing satisfaction, quality, sense of care and concern, courtesy, and abilities of their providers. The scores reported are averages of the 7 items, with scores ranging from 1-5 with a 1 generally corresponding to poor and a 5 to excellent. One item is scaled as yes/maybe/no ("would you recommend the medical center to your friends/relatives) with a yes=5, maybe=3, and no=1.
Time frame: 6 months post intervention
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