The overall aim of this study is to reduce overdose risk for criminal legal system (CLS) involved women during community re-entry through the adaptation and testing of an innovative, trauma-informed, relational intervention approach (Trust-Based Relational Intervention or TBRI).
R61 Phase (Intervention adaptation): The TBRI intervention will be strategically adapted for CLS-involved women during the R61 to achieve 2 specific aims: 1) Adapt TBRI by focusing on adapting two intervention components - prison group sessions and re-entry recovery support - using focus groups with key stakeholders (N=30) including administrators, practitioners, and women with "lived experience," and target alignment with the unique treatment needs of the women and establish intervention approach feasibility; and 2) Pilot test the adapted intervention components in one group of women (n=8) at the KCIW facility. Final adaptations will be made to the TRUST manual for the R33 implementation. R33 Phase (Intervention testing): The R33 will test the effectiveness of the adapted TBRI-WRA to reduce overdose risk in the community following prison release, while also collecting data on key constructs hypothesized to influence successful intervention implementation. The primary aim of the R33 is to examine effectiveness of the adapted TBRI Women's Re-entry Approach (TBRI-WRA) in reducing overdose risk among women (N=264) in four sites following release from prison-based SUD treatment. Study conditions include (1) Treatment as Usual (TAU, standard in-prison SUD treatment, n=88), (2) In-prison TBRI (TAU + TBRI prison-based sessions only; n=88), and (3) TBRI + Re-entry Recovery Support (TAU + prison-based TBRI sessions + Re-entry Recovery Support; n=88). The R33 will also examine implementation factors associated with study preparation, launch, sustainability, and scalability.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
264
The adapted TBRI WRA (Prison Only Component) titled TRUST will consist of an individual introductory module (1 hour) and a series of group modules (a minimum of 4 sessions, approximately 1-2 hours in length, delivered over the course of 3 months, with the final number and frequency to be determined in R61) focused on the core components of TBRI. The original TBRI approach includes a focus on group skills training; similarly, it is anticipated that R61 phase adaptations will meet the need for tailored skills training reflected by anticipated differences in the target population of women - including how their early attachment and trauma histories influence their current self-image and behavior (which likely has a tremendous impact on their relational attachments as adults). Group sessions will provide opportunities to build skills for regulating emotions and building healthy connections.
This condition includes the proposed adapted TRUST intervention as well as on-going re-entry recovery support with the Safe Support Person (SSP). The SSP will be identified by the study participant as someone who will provide prosocial support during re-entry (e.g., support towards abstinence, establishing healthy recovery support relationships, rebuilding relationships with family and children) and in most cases will involve a close family member (mother, grandmother) or friend at the woman's identified home placement. This individual will be identified by the study participant as someone who is not involved in active substance use nor has a current legal system status (e.g., on probation).
Franklin County Regional Jail
Frankfort, Kentucky, United States
Kentucky Correctional Institution for Women
Pewee Valley, Kentucky, United States
Chillicothe Correctional Center
Chillicothe, Missouri, United States
Women's Eastern Reception, Diagnostic and Correctional Center
Vandalia, Missouri, United States
Change in overdose risk
Change in number of days of any substance from baseline to post-release using self-report data
Time frame: Baseline and at 3 and 6 months post-release from prison
Change in trauma-related symptoms
Change in number of trauma-related symptoms associated with violence
Time frame: Baseline and at 3 and 6 months post-release from prison
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Women in the TAU condition will not receive TRUST intervention services, but will receive traditional in-prison SUD treatment over 6 months as usual in the four targeted prison sites. The programs are separate units with the prisons and emphasize participation by all program members in the overall goal of addressing substance use and criminal thinking. Although trauma and violence are addressed as part of the holistic group process approach in these programs, these topics are not addressed from an on-going systematic or relational perspective and are not specifically addressed as part of re-entry planning.