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Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED)

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Social Isolation

Treatments

Behavioral: VET BEFRIENDING
Behavioral: CONNECTED

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT06467214
IIR 22-144

Details and patient eligibility

About

Social isolation is a negative social determinant of health that affects 1-in-5 adults in the U.S. and 43% of Veterans. Social isolation is estimated to cost the nation $6.7 billion annually in federal healthcare spending. Yet, social isolation has rarely been the direct focus of healthcare interventions. The proposed project is a randomized controlled trial that seeks to test the effectiveness of the Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention on social isolation among diverse Veteran groups in primary care clinics. Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness involves three key services delivered by peers via telehealth through individual and group sessions over 8 weeks: 1) peer support, which includes person-centered assessment for social isolation, 2) psychosocial interventions to address social isolation, and 3) navigation (i.e., connecting Veterans to social resources). Findings from this study will contribute to the VA's efforts to address social determinants of health among Veterans and to provide high quality, person-centered, and equitable care to all Veterans.

Full description

Background: Social isolation is a global public health threat and a negative social determinant of health that affects 1 in 5 adults in the U.S. and contributes to $6.7 billion in annual healthcare spending.

Significance: Affecting roughly 43% of Veterans, social isolation is highly prevalent among Veterans, particularly those with a history of mental illness. Social isolation contributes to cardiovascular diseases, dementia, depression, suicidal ideation, and premature death. To date, social isolation remains largely unaddressed as a negative social determinant of health in healthcare systems. Current efforts to address social isolation are limited by lack of diverse participant samples, rigorous methodologies, and involvement of healthcare systems to systematically assess and reduce social isolation.

Innovation and Impact: To address these gaps, the proposed project will test a novel and feasible program to intervene on social isolation among diverse Veteran populations in the Veterans Health Administration healthcare system. The investigators propose to test the effects of the Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention on social isolation among Veterans. The Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention uses an innovative approach by integrating two existing evidence-based care models: peer services and patient navigation to address social isolation among Veterans in Veterans Health Administration primary care clinics. Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention involves three key services delivered by peer specialists via telehealth over 8 weeks: 1) peer support, which includes person-centered assessment of factors driving social isolation; 2) psychosocial interventions to address Veterans' social isolation (e.g., goal setting, supportive therapy, and group-based social engagement activities); and 3) navigation (i.e., connecting Veterans to social resources in the community and the Veterans Health Administration) to help expand their social networks. Because prior social isolation studies have not prioritized inclusion of younger and racially/ethnically diverse samples, the investigators will over sample these groups using stratified random sampling.

Specific Aims: The investigators aim for a randomized controlled clinical trial comparing Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention to an attention control group. Aim1: Test the effects of Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention on social isolation at 2-, 4-, and 8-months from baseline compared to the control group; Aim2: Test the effects of CONNECTED on secondary, health-related outcomes; and Aim 3: Conduct formative and pre-implementation evaluations to inform future implementation processes.

Methodology: Aims 1 and 2 involve delivering the intervention to (N=264) Veterans in Veterans Health Administration primary care clinics. Data from Aims 1 and 2 will be analyzed using general linear models. In Aim 3, the investigators will describe Veterans (n=20) and providers' experiences (N=10) with the intervention using semi-structured interviews to identify barriers and facilitators to the Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention's future implementation. The investigators will also survey peers and peer supervisors (n=20) from VISN10 VA facilities (n=13) and interview a subgroup of survey completers (n=8) to evaluate factors that may affect potential adoption of the Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention in Veterans Health Administration and to identify future implementation strategies. Qualitative data from Aim 3 will be analyzed using an inductive/deductive approach.

Next Steps & Implementation: Should this trial be successful the investigators will work with operational partners to implement the Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention in the Veterans Health Administration. The next step will also involve the evaluation of Increasing Veterans' Social Engagement and Connectedness (CONNECTED) intervention's core elements and its implementation in diverse Veterans Health Administration facilities.

Enrollment

264 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Eligible participants for Aim 1 & Aim 2

  1. Must be Veterans at the Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center or its Community-Based Outpatient Clinics who had a primary care encounter in the prior 6 months and
  2. Veteran obtained a score 12, indicating social isolation, on the Lubben Social Isolation Scale (LSNS-6), a validated, 6-item social isolation measure, at the time of screening in Aim 1.

Exclusion criteria

For Aim 1 and Aim 2, the investigators will exclude Veterans with

  1. Active suicidal ideation needing immediate mental health treatment
  2. severe cognitive, hearing or speech impairment,
  3. current exacerbation of severe psychiatric symptoms (e.g., active psychosis), or
  4. severe illness that makes study participation not feasible.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

264 participants in 2 patient groups

CONNECTED
Experimental group
Description:
CONNECTED integrates two evidence-based care models--peer support and patient navigation--and involves the delivery of three services by peers: 1) peer support, which includes person-centered assessment for drivers of social isolation; 2) group-based interventions to address Veterans' social isolation and 3) navigation, which involves connecting Veterans to social resources to facilitate social participation. CONNECTED is delivered through individual and group sessions over 8 weeks. All sessions will be delivered via videoconference. Veterans may choose to receive some peer support sessions in person when feasible, to facilitate engagement and retention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: CONNECTED
VET BEFRIENDING
Active Comparator group
Description:
VET BEFRIENDING (attention control arm) consists of weekly social interactions with a research assistant (RA). It will match the number of social contacts (12 contacts), frequency (weekly), intervention expectancy (positive treatment expectations), and working alliance (rapport with interventionist) in the intervention arm. The control condition has no overlap with CONNECTED in terms of content and therapeutic elements (e.g., goal setting, navigation).
Treatment:
Behavioral: VET BEFRIENDING

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ai-Nghia L Do, BA; Johanne Eliacin, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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