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The purpose of this study is to pilot test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of healthcare provider referrals to a tax filing app within parent-child health programs to test whether such referrals can increase receipt of tax credits among low-income parents. The study will use a single-group, pre/post test design with a sample of parents who have a child under 6 years of age. Participants will be recruited from parental-child health programs and clinics in Los Angeles and will complete surveys at baseline, immediately after tax filing season, and six months after tax filing season to assess 1) frequency of tax filing after referral (Feasibility), and 2) pre/posttest changes to parent and child health (preliminary efficacy).
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Aims: The purpose of this study is to pilot test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of healthcare provider referrals to a tax filing app within parental-child health programs whether such referrals can increase receipt of tax credits among low-income parents. The study will use a single-group, pre/posttest design. The primary outcome is feasibility, defined as whether or not participants filed taxes after referral. Secondary outcomes are acceptability of the app and preliminary efficacy of the app on improved parent and child health. Specific aims are to:
Design: This pilot study will use a single-group, pre/post-test design to assess the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of healthcare provider referrals to a tax filing app.
Intervention: Referrals to a tax filing app
Setting: The setting for this study is maternal/child health programs and clinics in Los Angeles.
Sample: The target population is parents making less than $75,000 per year in income . Parents will be eligible to participate in the study if they are within the income threshold, have one or more children under six years of age, speak English or Spanish, have access to an internet-enabled device (smart phone or tablet), and have a valid tax filing ID (SSN or ITIN). Parents will be ineligible if they have already filed taxes during the study period or are experiencing an acute mental health crisis (e.g., suicidality). We focus on children under six years of age because this is a critical and sensitive developmental window when interventions have potential for outsized impact on child health.
Procedures: Parents will be recruited during program visits/encounters early in tax season in 2023. Those that provide informed consent to participate in the study will complete a baseline survey and receive the assigned intervention (referral to a tax filing app) the same day or within the same week of their program visit. Parents will complete a follow-up survey to assess outcome measures after they receive tax refunds. A second follow-up survey will be sent 3-6 months later (depending on time of filing, and average time of receipt of tax credit this season) to assess medium-term outcomes.
Outcomes. We will assess the following outcomes. The primary study outcome is feasibility; acceptability and preliminary health efficacy are secondary outcomes.
Feasibility: Self-reported tax filing (items developed for this study) Preliminary efficacy: We will assess pre/posttest changes in the following health-related measures as indicators of preliminary efficacy: 1a) parent overall health rating (PROMIS® Scale v1.2 - Global Health [Hays et al., 2009]; Patient Health Questionnaire- 2 [Kroenke et al., 2003); and 1b) child overall health and developing rating (PROMIS® Early Childhood Parent Report Global Health [Forrest et al., 2014]).
Demographic and family health background information (see survey: age, gender, race/ethnicity, income, social determinants of health, health background, other tax filing characteristics) will be collected to identify characteristics of the sample. In future studies, we intend to study in greater depth the physical health outcomes that might be sensitive to this intervention with longer-term follow up.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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