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A Comprehensive Disease Management Program for Medically-Complex Substance Users

Johns Hopkins University logo

Johns Hopkins University

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Substance-related Disorder

Treatments

Other: Case management
Behavioral: Contingency Management

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00865956
NA_00015261

Details and patient eligibility

About

Disease management (DM) programs are being increasingly utilized by health plans to coordinate care, improve quality of care, and control costs in chronically ill individuals. DM programs for specific medical conditions, such as diabetes mellitus, congestive heart failure, and asthma, have demonstrated improvements in health outcomes and a number of studies have found economic benefits to these programs as well. There are fewer data evaluating multi-disease DM programs, and results have been mixed. Additionally, data on such programs specifically targeting substance-using populations are limited, although they are promising. Prior utilization and hospitalization data from Johns Hopkins Hospital, Johns Hopkins Health Care, and Priority Partners Managed Care Organization (PPMCO) suggest that a substantial portion of high-utilizing, high-cost, medically complex patients have a substance use diagnosis.

The investigators hypothesize that a comprehensive DM program for medically-complex substance users with a history of hospitalization, consisting of intensive nurse case management along with behavioral incentives to reinforce engagement in primary care, can decrease inpatient days and costs, as well as improve outcomes for substance use, depression, and physical and mental functioning. The investigators will compare the case management/behavioral incentives intervention to usual care among a group of medically-complex, substance-using, PPMCO enrollees. Usual care will include access to all existing Priority Partners care management programs, and usual The investigators believe that this research will make an important contribution to the development of models of chronic care that improve health and promote the best use of health care resources. Additionally, the investigators believe this project will promote the study and development of systems to improve the health of substance-using adults, an underserved and often marginalized group.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age over 18
  • Continuous enrollment in Priority Partners MCO for past 12 months
  • Primary care site East Baltimore Medical Center (EBMC)
  • PPMCO substance abuse flag other than nicotine only within past 24 months

Exclusion criteria

  • currently enrolled in PPMCO Care Management

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Care Management
Experimental group
Description:
Care Management plus voucher incentives for adherence to primary care appointments.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Contingency Management
Other: Case management
Usual care
No Intervention group
Description:
Usual care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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