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Reducing Offenders' HIV Risk: MI Enhanced Case Management With Drug-Free Housing

P

Public Health Institute, California

Status

Completed

Conditions

Alcohol and Drug Abuse

Treatments

Behavioral: Resource referrals
Behavioral: Motivational interviewing case management

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT01977092
1R01DA034973-01A1
R01DA034973-01A1 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of the study is to see if a Motivational Interviewing Case Management (MICM) intervention will improve outcomes for respondents who are on probation or parole, at risk for HIV and have recently entered a Sober Living House. The MICM will help respondents access needed services, adapt to their new living environment, find and maintain work, address HIV risk and treatment, and manage setbacks. The risk for HIV infection among criminal justice offenders is significant, as is the need for stable, drug free housing in this population. Our aim is to see if the MICM intervention in the context of drug free housing will improve health outcomes and reduce recidivism.

Full description

This study is based on the premise that probationers and parolees must have access to stable, drug-free housing to reduce HIV risk, access needed services and avoid rearrests and reincarceration. Drug-free housing at the Sober Living Network (SLN) in California are being studied as a way to provide a positive living environment for probationers and parolees. The houses use a sober living house (SLH) model of recovery that includes a communal recovery environment, abstinence from drugs and alcohol, peer support, and encouragement to attend self-help groups such as Alcoholics Anonymous.

The proposed study will improve SLHs for offenders by adding a Motivational Interviewing Case Management (MICM) intervention specifically targeted to the problems presented by each offender. The list of potential problems that MICM can address is extensive: 1) adapting to the SLH environment, 2) complying with parole and probation, 3) finding and maintain work, 4) successfully accessing and maintaining retention in services, 5) addressing HIV risk, testing and treatment, 6) mobilizing personal and informal resources, and 7) managing setbacks (e.g., relapse, loss of housing, loss of work).

Men and women involved with the criminal justice system (N=330) entering SLHs will be assigned to a condition consisting of a provision of a resources manual where residents can seek help for a variety of problems (a control group) or the MICM (intervention).To avoid mixing individuals who receive the intervention with individuals who do not within the same house, houses are randomized at the house level. Once a house is randomized to a study condition, all of the individuals recruited from that house receive the same intervention, MICM or SLH as usual. To avoid contamination of study conditions by gender, randomization procedures are stratified by houses for men, women, and both genders. Research interviews are conducted at baseline (within one month of entering the houses), 6 months, and 12 months. Follow-up interviews are conducted whether or not the participant leaves the SLH and at a site that is the most comfortable for the participant.

Enrollment

330 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Be 18 years or older
  • Speak English
  • Entered the sober living house in the last month
  • Able to provide contact info for followups
  • Willing to attend MICM sessions
  • On probation or parole
  • ONE of the following: tested positive for HIV, injected drugs, sex work history, men who have sex with men (MSM), or women who have had unprotected sex in the last month with multiple partners

Exclusion criteria

  • serious mental health disorder that would hinder their ability to provide informed consent or otherwise participate

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

330 participants in 2 patient groups

Motivational interviewing case management
Experimental group
Description:
MICM intervention combines aspects of motivational interviewing along with case management to influence HIV risk and recovery from alcohol and drug problems. Participants assigned to the MICM condition will be contacted to receive 3 individual sessions within the first 4 weeks of entering the study. Thereafter they will have contact with the MICM therapist monthly throughout the duration of their enrollment in the study (12 months).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Motivational interviewing case management
Resource referrals
Other group
Description:
Respondents will receive SLH services as usual along with a list of resources that can be used to address a variety of problems.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Resource referrals

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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