Simmons Molly M, Fincke Benjamin G, Drainoni Mari-Lynn, Kim Bo, Byrne Tom, Smelson David, Casey Kevin, Ellison Marsha L, Visher Christy, Blue-Howells Jessica, McInnes D Keith
VA Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR), Bedford, USA.
Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2017 Sep 12;17(1):647. doi: 10.1186/s12913-017-2572-x.
Approximately 600,000 persons are released from prison annually in the United States. Relatively few receive sufficient re-entry services and are at risk for unemployment, homelessness, poverty, substance abuse relapse and recidivism. Persons leaving prison who have a mental illness and/or a substance use disorder are particularly challenged. This project aims to create a peer mentor program to extend the reach and effectiveness of reentry services provided by the Department of Veterans' Affairs (VA). We will implement a peer support for reentry veterans sequentially in two states. Our outcome measures are 1) fidelity of the intervention, 2) linkage to VA health care and, 3) continued engagement in health care. The aims for this project are as follows: (1) Conduct contextual analysis to identify VA and community reentry resources, and describe how reentry veterans use them. (2) Implement peer-support, in one state, to link reentry veterans to Veterans' Health Administration (VHA) primary care, mental health, and SUD services. (3) Port the peer-support intervention to another, geographically, and contextually different state.
This intervention involves a 2-state sequential implementation study (Massachusetts, followed by Pennsylvania) using a Facilitation Implementation strategy. We will conduct formative and summative analyses, including assessment of fidelity, and a matched comparison group to evaluate the intervention's outcomes of veteran linkage and engagement in VHA health care (using health care utilization measures). The study proceeds in 3 phases.
We anticipate that a peer support program will be effective at improving the reentry process for veterans, particularly in linking them to health, mental health, and SUD services and helping them to stay engaged in those services. It will fill a gap by providing veterans with access to a trusted individual, who understands their experience as a veteran and who has experienced justice involvement. The outputs from this project, including training materials, peer guidebooks, and implementation strategies can be adapted by other states and regions that wish to enhance services for veterans (or other populations) leaving incarceration. A larger cluster-randomized implementation-effectiveness study is planned.
This protocol is registered with clinicaltrials.gov on November 4, 2016 and was assigned the number NCT02964897 .
在美国,每年约有60万人从监狱获释。相对较少的人能获得足够的重新融入社会服务,面临失业、无家可归、贫困、药物滥用复发和再次犯罪的风险。有精神疾病和/或物质使用障碍的出狱人员面临的挑战尤为严峻。本项目旨在创建一个同伴指导计划,以扩大退伍军人事务部(VA)提供的重新融入社会服务的覆盖范围和效果。我们将在两个州依次为重新融入社会的退伍军人实施同伴支持。我们的结果指标为:1)干预的保真度;2)与VA医疗保健的联系;3)持续参与医疗保健。本项目的目标如下:(1)进行背景分析,以确定VA和社区的重新融入社会资源,并描述重新融入社会的退伍军人如何利用这些资源。(2)在一个州实施同伴支持,将重新融入社会的退伍军人与退伍军人健康管理局(VHA)的初级保健、心理健康和药物使用障碍服务联系起来。(3)将同伴支持干预措施推广到另一个地理和背景不同的州。
本干预涉及一项双州序贯实施研究(先在马萨诸塞州,后在宾夕法尼亚州),采用促进实施策略。我们将进行形成性和总结性分析,包括保真度评估,以及一个匹配的对照组,以评估干预措施在退伍军人与VHA医疗保健的联系和参与方面的结果(使用医疗保健利用指标)。该研究分三个阶段进行。
我们预计同伴支持计划将有效地改善退伍军人的重新融入社会过程,特别是在将他们与健康、心理健康和药物使用障碍服务联系起来并帮助他们持续参与这些服务方面。它将通过为退伍军人提供接触一位值得信赖的人的机会来填补空白,这个人了解他们作为退伍军人的经历且有过司法介入的经历。本项目的产出,包括培训材料、同伴指南和实施策略,可供其他希望加强为刑满释放退伍军人(或其他人群)提供服务的州和地区采用。计划开展一项更大规模的整群随机实施效果研究。
本方案于2016年11月4日在clinicaltrials.gov上注册,注册号为NCT02964897。