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Navigating Resource-Constrained Systems and Communities to Promote the Behavioral Health of Black Youth

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The Washington University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Disruptive Behavior Disorder

Treatments

Other: Standard Care
Other: Child Behavioral Health Navigator (cbhN)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04113161
MH116895

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to reduce racial disparities in child mental health care by examining the impact of a child behavioral health navigator (cbhNs) intervention in which cbhNs (n=15) will be trained to deliver an evidence-based family engagement, psychoeducation and support intervention to 390 early adolescent youth (10 to 14 years) and their families of African descent living in geographically defined St. Louis north city and county neighborhoods.

Full description

Black youth living in poverty-impacted communities are disproportionately burdened by behavioral health challenges, notably serious disruptive behavioral difficulties (DBDs). In some urban communities, prevalence rates of conduct related difficulties among young people of color exceed 40%. Simultaneously, serious care disparities are widespread and persistent. Without access to care, children with DBDs frequently suffer impairment in school functioning, strained relationships with teachers, peers and family members, and coercive interactions with school discipline or juvenile justice authorities. The seemingly intractable challenges of identifying, engaging and retaining low-income children of color and their families in needed mental health care has persisted despite significant scientific advances, including: a) decades of research identifying the multi-level barriers to care experienced by families of color; b) multiple investigations supporting a range of provider training approaches capable of enhancing family engagement; and c) empirical support for integrating outreach specialists, case managers and parent peer support staff across health, mental health, school and community-based settings to address behavioral health care gaps.

This study is based on the premise that if care navigation models are going to succeed where previous efforts have failed in eliminating racial disparities in child mental health care, then the preparation and support for child behavioral health navigators (cbhNs) needs to include: 1) training to deliver evidence-based family engagement, psychoeducation and support interventions; 2) ongoing coaching and supervision focused on building collaborative relationships between families and providers and; 3) skills to enhance community/system buy-in, as well as to analyze and interrupt multi-level structural influences on disparities and system gaps (including training to assess and intervene in the complex relationships between youth, adult caregivers, providers, system leaders, and community-based networks) within low-income communities.

The proposed study will be conducted in 2 phases. Phase 1 involves the recruitment and training of a new cohort of cbhNs (n=15), intentionally involving committed individuals of color from an existing community-based network of youth service system partners, HomeGrown STL. CbhNs (n=15) will be hired based on experience serving youth and families in target communities, St. Louis north city and county neighborhoods, but do not necessarily have extensive mental health training. CbhNs will be prepared to collaborate with youth/families via an interactive training protocol which integrates existing evidence-based cbhN approaches, including engagement interventions, family support and education, adapted care navigation models and empirically supported implementation strategies to address barriers.

Phase 2 is a mixed methods, hybrid effectiveness implementation experimental study, enrolling 390 early adolescent youth (10 to 14 years) of African descent and their families living in geographically defined St. Louis north city and county neighborhoods (racially segregated areas with high poverty concentration), aimed at simultaneously examining multi-level factors that enhance or impede cbhN interaction and youth/family outcomes. This study exclusively focuses on youth and families frequently missed or not retained in services.

The following specific aims guide the proposed study:

Primary Aim #1: To examine youth/family level outcomes associated with cbhNs (e.g. rates of identification of DBDs, youth/family engagement and motivation, access to assessment/care, alliance with and response to cbhNs, youth behavioral functioning over time); Primary Aim #2: To identify multi-level factors that impede/facilitate navigation (e.g. stigma, gaps in collaboration across youth, families, providers, system level limitations, relationship with cbhN); Exploratory Aim #1: To explore the response to cbhNs by key network and system stakeholders (e.g. perceptions of cbhN helpfulness, understanding and support for cbhN relationships with families, attributions of reductions in system barriers), as well as of the cbhNs, specifically their response to evidence-informed interactive training (e.g. child behavioral health and care knowledge and navigation skill, efficacy regarding collaboration with families, providers and systems).

This study is being conducted by a transdisciplinary network of scientists at Washington University in St. Louis (STL) and New York University in collaboration with service organizations, child behavioral health policy officials and the HomeGrown St. Louis (STL) network, including an existing Advisory Board. The proposed study is set within high poverty communities and focused on youth/families of color who rely on resource-constrained clinics to address serious youth mental health needs. The study capitalizes on significant preliminary work, including the mapping of all early adolescent youth of African descent in the target communities and the collaborative refinement of an evidence-informed cbhN training protocol. This application aligns with NIH's priorities to address underlying health disparities, as well as to enhance public health impact of mental health focused research studies.

Enrollment

405 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

10+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

There are two samples in this study: 1) child/caregiver dyads (n=390) and 2) child behavioral health navigators (n=15). Inclusion and exclusion criteria are as follows:

  1. Youth Caregiver Dyads: Inclusion Criteria: Youth of African descent, between 10 and 14 years, evidencing elevated behaviors associated with DBDs, and willing to provide assent and who has an adult caregiver capable of providing informed consent. Caregiver will have physical custody of the youth.

    Exclusion Criteria: Youth or adult caregivers not capable of providing informed consent, or evidencing an emergency psychiatric or safety issue that requires immediate attention to prevent harm to self or others.

  2. CbhN: Inclusion Criteria: Adults > 21 years, primarily of African descent who have experience working or volunteering in the target communities; willing to participate in the study and provide informed consent.

Exclusion Criteria: Adults not capable of providing informed consent, or evidencing an emergency psychiatric or safety issue that requires immediate attention to prevent harm to self or others.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

405 participants in 2 patient groups

Standard Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard care will consist of 1) community-based screening and referral and 2) monthly contacts by a case manager, who will track attendance in mental health services and provide referrals upon request.
Treatment:
Other: Standard Care
Child Behavioral Health Navigators (cbhN)
Experimental group
Description:
CbhNs will engage in a series of face to face and phone contacts with families to coordinate needed appointments at mental health care sites, as well as a range of human service support organizations (e.g. housing, food, financial, legal assistance). Over time, contact may decrease as the youth/family make ongoing connection with mental health care and other resources. However, over the course of the study (twelve months), twice per month check-ins will be routine between cbhNs and families. In addition, the cbhN will be expected to actively engage with the range of service providers and mental health resources as needed and preferred by the family. These contacts include telephone linkage calls, in-person advocacy meetings and at time, accompanying the youth and families to meetings at each organization.
Treatment:
Other: Child Behavioral Health Navigator (cbhN)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Mary M McKay, PhD; Mary C Acri, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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