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Using Re-inforcement Learning to Automatically Adapt a Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI) for Reducing Adolescent Violence Involvement

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University of Michigan

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Violence in Adolescence
Substance Use
Criminal Behavior
Violence

Treatments

Behavioral: Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI)
Behavioral: Artificial Intelligence Remote Therapy Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04850274
HUM00160149
5R01HD097107-03 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will use a randomized control trial (RCT) design to administer two versions of a multisession remote behavioral intervention for youth seeking Emergency Department care for a violent injury with the goal to reduce their violence involvement and associated negative behaviors and consequences. The study examines two versions of the remote therapy intervention - a standard RTI (S-RTI) and an Artificial Intelligence RTI (AI-RTI). The application of a just-in-time adaptive strategy to address youth violence is an important and novel direction for this research, particularly given the need to understand best practices for delivering behavioral interventions among lower-income populations.

Full description

The Specific Aims for the proposed study are to refine the Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI) for delivery using a standardized remote therapy package (S-RTI; 1 ED + 5 remote sessions) based on a piloted RTI and an adaptive RTI that optimizes bi-weekly dose and intervention intensity between four levels of therapy (remote therapy+, remote therapy; automated electronic tailored therapy; none) based on a reinforcement learning (RL) algorithm [AI-RTI]. A total of 750 youth (age=14-24) seeking ED care for a violent injury will be enrolled and randomly assigned (stratified by age/gender) to the S-RTI (n=250), AI-RTI (n=300), and a control (EUC; n=200) condition. In addition to the randomized assignment, all youth will take a daily assessment over the course of the intervention timeline. Outcomes will be assessed at 6 and 12 months.

Enrollment

584 patients

Sex

All

Ages

14 to 24 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Youth will be eligible if they screen is positive for seeking treatment in the ED for a violent injury, age 14-24, and report ownership of a smartphone with texting capability and internet access.

Exclusion criteria

  • Youth will be excluded if they do not understand English, cannot provide informed consent due to mental incompetence, incarceration or medical instability (unstable patients will be recruited if they stabilize within 72 hours), are 14-17 years old and presenting without an accessible parent/guardian, are presenting for suicide attempt/intent, sexual assault, and/or child abuse (due to high intensity of social services needed for such patients during their ED visit).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

584 participants in 3 patient groups

Remote Therapy Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Youth will receive the maximal dose of six S-RTI therapy sessions delivered by a remote therapist with no alteration in intensity
Treatment:
Behavioral: Remote Therapy Intervention (RTI)
Artificial Intelligence Remote Therapy Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Youth will first receive a remote therapy session in the Emergency Department (ED). The RL system will then make decisions about the intensity of each subsequent therapy session (the initial decision is seven days post ED visit and bi-weekly \[i.e., every other two weeks\] thereafter) for the next 11 weeks. Potential treatment decisions include a 30-minute remote therapy session delivered via phone or video chat (mirroring the S-RTI), a less intensive tailored Motivational Interviewing (MI)-adherent electronic remote therapy (delivered by an electronic robot), or an assessment only without intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Artificial Intelligence Remote Therapy Intervention
Enhanced Usual Care
No Intervention group
Description:
The youth's retaliatory risk will be assessed and a pamphlet with referrals for violence, substance use, and mental health services will be provided.

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Central trial contact

Lynn S Massey, MSW; Patrick M Carter, M.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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