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Mechanisms of Action and Outcome (Peer Support)

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) logo

US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mental Disorders

Treatments

Behavioral: recovery oriented mental health peer support group
Behavioral: recovery-oriented mental health clinician-led group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT00555568
D4464-R

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of this study is to examine the mechanisms of action and outcome in mental health peer support groups. The study design is a randomized trial in which participants are assigned to one of three study arms: a recovery oriented mental health group led by peer facilitators (Vet-to-Vet), a recovery oriented group led by a clinician, or "treatment as usual." Qualitative and quantitative methods will be used to assess substantive content and process of the recovery groups, as well as mental health and recovery outcomes.

Full description

Background: Rehabilitation and recovery services for individuals with psychiatric disorders are an important focus of the Veterans Health Administration. In FY 2004, 847,131 veterans (17.4% of VHA patients) received specialized VHA mental health services at a cost of almost $2 billion. In June 2004, Secretary Principi initiated a Mental Health Task Force to improve mental health care for veterans. The resulting comprehensive strategic plan, A Road Map for Transforming VA Mental Health Care" presented two central recommendations: 1) emphasize the recovery model at every medical center, and 2) develop and implement the full continuum of recovery-oriented mental health services. A recovery oriented mental health system is one that fosters self-determination, hope, and empowerment. Peer/consumer support groups, which provide a forum for mutual acceptance, empowerment, information, education, advocacy, skills training, and community reintegration are an important component of this plan, and have been implemented in a number of VHA centers.

Objectives: The objectives of the proposed research are to assess the content and impact of VHA mental health peer support groups for recovery from mental illness. Specifically, we will: a) examine the structure, process and outcome of two models of recovery-oriented group treatment for mental health-peer/consumer support groups led by peer facilitators (Vet-to-Vet program), and recovery-oriented groups led by a clinician; b) assess and compare empowerment, social support, traditional outcomes (psychiatric and substance abuse symptoms, community functioning) and recovery-oriented outcomes (hope, strength/resiliency) in each type of program; and c) test a model in which recovery-oriented outcomes are mediated by empowerment and social support.

Methods: The study will use a research design in which participants are randomly assigned to attend an existing peer facilitator-led support group, a clinician-led recovery-oriented group, or "treatment as usual". The sample will include 300 individuals receiving outpatient mental health services at one of two VA sites: Bedford, MA or West Haven, CT. Qualitative and quantitative methods will be used to address the research objectives. We will observe and tape record a sample of group meetings, and interview participants and group leaders (consumer-facilitators or clinicians) to analyze and understand the "ingredients" (structure and content) of these groups. We will use standardized measures of self-efficacy, empowerment and social support to determine effects of group type on participants' feelings of empowerment and social support, and whether empowerment and social support result in better outcomes. We will assess recovery-oriented (hope, optimism, strength and resilience) and traditional (symptom and functioning) outcomes. Qualitative data from group observations and interviews will be used to explore what other factors might explain the effects of participation in peer-support and clinician-led groups. Quantitative measures will be analyzed using regression modeling in an "intent to treat" approach. Path analysis that entails a series of regression models will be used to test the hypothesized mediation effect.

Significance to VA: The VA has made a clear commitment to implementation of peer-support programs as part of a recovery-oriented transformation of its mental health service system. However, there is currently no published research reporting the processes or outcomes of these programs. This study will provide valuable information regarding if, why and how peer support groups, as well as clinician-led recovery-oriented groups, benefit veterans with mental illness. This information will be valuable in guiding implementation of such programs across the country.

Enrollment

298 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • veteran in treatment for a psychiatric disorder at a participating study site

Exclusion criteria

  • currently participating in a recovery group that constitutes an intervention arm of this research study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

298 participants in 3 patient groups

Peer-led Groups
Experimental group
Description:
Arm 1 is a 3-month recovery-focused mental health education and support group led by peer facilitators
Treatment:
Behavioral: recovery oriented mental health peer support group
Clinician-led Groups
Experimental group
Description:
Arm 2 is a 3-month recovery-focused mental health education and support group led by a mental health clinician
Treatment:
Behavioral: recovery-oriented mental health clinician-led group
Treatment as Usual
No Intervention group
Description:
Arm 3 is treatment as usual (no intervention)

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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