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Improving Productive Community Integration in Homeless-experienced Veterans (MI-CBT)

VA Office of Research and Development logo

VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Begins enrollment in 5 months

Conditions

Homeless Persons

Treatments

Other: Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Other: Healthy Behavior Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT07388641
1I01RD000643-01A1 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
RRD4-008-25M

Details and patient eligibility

About

The VA has been focused on reducing the number of homeless Veterans nationally. However, it has been very difficult to increase the level of productive activities--including work, school, and training--for homeless-experienced Veterans (HEVs), even when the VA provides substantial case management and support services in addition to housing. The overarching aim of this proposed treatment project is to validate an innovative psychosocial intervention (a combination of Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy; MI-CBT) that is designed to enhance motivation and increase productive community integration in Veterans who have experienced homelessness. The efficacy of this new intervention will be evaluated in a randomized control trial that includes 24 weeks of active treatment, and a follow up assessment, compared with a control condition. The results of the proposed study will have clinical and functional impact for Veterans by helping HEVs to achieve fuller community integration.

Full description

Significance to the VA: The VA has been heavily focused on reducing the number of homeless Veterans nationally. However, it has been very difficult to increase the level of productive activities--including work, school, and training--for homeless-experienced Veterans (HEVs), even when the VA provides substantial case management and support services in addition to housing. The overarching aim of this proposed project is to validate a recovery-oriented psychosocial intervention that is designed to reduce motivational impairments and increase productive community integration in Veterans who have experienced homelessness and are now housed.

Innovation and Impact: The work in two randomized controlled trials (RCT) has shown that an innovative psychosocial intervention, Motivational Interviewing combined with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (MI-CBT), significantly increases motivation to achieve personally-relevant functional goals compared with a control procedure. However, the investigators do not know whether this new psychosocial intervention can specifically improve productive aspects of community integration which tend to be most resistant to change. Further, the investigators do not understand the mechanisms through which treatments achieve their benefits. The results of the proposed study will have substantial clinical and functional impact for Veterans by helping HEVs to achieve fuller community integration. The findings will also have the potential to influence the types of psychosocial interventions that are being used in Homeless Programs throughout the VA.

Specific Aims: The proposed project has two aims. Aim 1 is to examine the effects of MI-CBT versus a Healthy Lifestyles control intervention on two primary measures (a proximal outcome of motivation and more distal outcome of behavior) related to productive community integration in HEVs over the 24 weeks of active treatment (i.e., 12 weeks of weekly treatment and 12 weeks of monthly boosters). Aim 2 is to examine the treatment effects of MI-CBT versus the control intervention on a secondary outcome measure of effort allocation. The project has Exploratory Aims to assess whether effort allocation is a mediator of observed changes in motivation and productive behavior and to evaluate whether baseline length of housing is a moderator of the treatment effects.

Methodology: The aims will be evaluated in an RCT that includes 24 weeks of active treatment (group sessions weekly for the first half and boosters every 4 weeks thereafter). A follow up assessment will be conducted at 36 weeks to assess durability. The study will include a total of 106 HEVs who are not involved in jobs, school, or training at their baseline assessment. Participants will be randomly assigned 1:1 to MI-CBT or to an active control condition. There will be two primary outcome measures: the proximal treatment target will be motivation for productive activities; the distal target will be community integration based on average hours of productive activity per week. A secondary outcome will be a measure of effort allocation based on performance on an effort-based decision-making task.

Path to Translation / Implementation: In the proposed RCT, HEVs will be randomly assigned to an innovative psychosocial intervention to improve their productive community activities. It is an efficacy study and is considered a T2-A: Phase II trial which is intended to determine the efficacy of therapy in patients. If the proposed project is successful, the subsequent study would be a larger, multi-site RCT in a broader sample of HEVs. That would move the aims into T2-B: Phase III larger clinical trials to establish efficacy and optimal use in humans.

Enrollment

106 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Veteran
  • fluent in English
  • history of homelessness and currently housed through VA HUD-VASH housing programs
  • expressed willingness to work on a school, work, or training goals

Exclusion criteria

  • no clinically significant medical, neurological, or physical condition that would interfere with providing informed consent or valid assessments
  • no visible sign of intoxication on the laboratory assessment visits

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

106 participants in 2 patient groups

MI-CBT
Experimental group
Description:
Combination of Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Treatment:
Other: Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Health Lifestyles
Active Comparator group
Description:
An educational program that instructs participants on important concepts in nutrition, exercise, and stress management.
Treatment:
Other: Healthy Behavior Training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

John J Fraser, DPT PhD; Peter C Hunt, PhD MPH BA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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