Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
161 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-02-21
2024-09-13
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Unfortunately, the most widely available approach-individual-level, abstinence-based treatment-does not effectively engage or treat this population. In our prior research, chronically homeless people with AUDs indicated they were not interested in abstinence-based approaches, having experienced a mean of 16 abstinence-based treatment episodes in their lifetimes. Further, our research has shown that improvements in alcohol outcomes in this population are associated with intrinsic motivation for change but not with abstinence-based treatment attendance. Instead, chronically homeless people with AUDs have indicated that they prefer community-based, harm-reduction approaches that support their own self-defined pathways to recovery. They are particularly interested in creative and socially engaging activities that bear personal meaning.
As applied to alcohol use, harm reduction refers to a broad range of compassionate and pragmatic approaches applied at the individual, community, population or policy levels that aim to reduce alcohol-related harm and improve quality of life (QoL) for affected people and their communities. Housing First, also referred to as harm-reduction housing, is one such approach. Housing First entails the provision of immediate, permanent, low-barrier, supportive housing without preconditions such as alcohol abstinence or treatment attendance. Our own and others' research has shown Housing First to be associated with reductions in alcohol-related harm as well as publicly funded service utilization and cost (e.g., emergency medical services, emergency department, jail) for people experiencing chronic homelessness. Despite these positive outcomes, many Housing First residents still experience alcohol-related harm due to their own and their neighbors' alcohol use. There is thus a need for further interventions to address alcohol use in this setting.
In response to this need, our research team used a community-based participatory research approach to work together with Housing First residents, management and staff to develop and initially test the effectiveness of a community-level intervention, the Life Enhancing Alcohol-management Program (LEAP) to improve alcohol and quality-of-life (QoL) outcomes for residents living in Housing First settings (K01AA021147; PI: Clifasefi). We first conducted needs assessments with residents, staff, and management and then formed a community advisory board to oversee the development, implementation, and evaluation of the LEAP. Together, we developed LEAP values, processes, and components. LEAP components for residents included leadership opportunities, LEAP activities, and pathways to recovery. Once developed, the LEAP was tested in a nonrandomized controlled pilot (N=116) with residents at 3 Housing First sites: 2 sites served as services-as-usual control sites and 1 received LEAP. Findings were promising: LEAP participants reported significantly more engagement in meaningful activities than control participants. This finding is important because engagement in meaningful activities is associated with improved medical, psychiatric, and substance-use outcomes. In within-subjects analyses, LEAP participants showed significant pre-post reductions in alcohol use and alcohol-related problems. These changes showed a dose-response effect based on participants' attendance at LEAP activities: high levels of LEAP programming engagement (\>2 activities per month) predicted significant reductions in alcohol quantity and alcohol-related harm (ps \< .01).
To establish a more definitive evidence base for LEAP, we propose to test LEAP effectiveness using a 2-arm, 12-month, cluster-randomized controlled trial at 10 Housing First sites (N=160). Sites will be randomized to the services-as-usual control or LEAP conditions. Quantitative analyses will test LEAP effectiveness in improving participants' alcohol and QoL outcomes from baseline through the 3, 6-, and 12-month follow-up assessments.
The specific aims are to test:
1. LEAP effectiveness in reducing alcohol use and alcohol-related harm and improving QoL. Compared to controls, LEAP participants will report less alcohol use; less first- and secondhand alcohol-related harm; and improved health-related and general QoL over the follow-up.
2. Group differences in participants' engagement in meaningful activities as well as its role as a mediator of changes on alcohol and QoL outcomes.
1. Over time, it is expected that LEAP participants will report more engagement in meaningful activities than control participants.
2. It is expected that greater engagement in meaningful activities will explain the hypothesized positive LEAP effect on outcomes.
3. LEAP effects on costs associated with healthcare and criminal justice service utilization (i.e., emergency medical services, emergency department services, jail). Compared to control participants, LEAP participants will show greater decreases in service utilization costs over time.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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LEAP
Housing First plus LEAP
LEAP
The LEAP is a comprehensive, multidimensional, community-level intervention offered in Housing First settings that was developed using a CBPR framework. The LEAP principles, process, and components were conceptualized and operationalized by the CAB in the pilot study, and are outlined in a recently published articles in the American Psychologist and Journal of Community Psychology. Briefly, LEAP principles include recognizing and respecting community as a key unit of identity versus solely as individuals in a traditional research hierarchy; embracing cultural humility; practicing pragmatism and compassion; aiming to build equitable research partnerships with communities; acknowledging and promoting community strengths; and supporting relevant, sustainable, positive and community-led change.
Service-As-Usual
Housing First
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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LEAP
The LEAP is a comprehensive, multidimensional, community-level intervention offered in Housing First settings that was developed using a CBPR framework. The LEAP principles, process, and components were conceptualized and operationalized by the CAB in the pilot study, and are outlined in a recently published articles in the American Psychologist and Journal of Community Psychology. Briefly, LEAP principles include recognizing and respecting community as a key unit of identity versus solely as individuals in a traditional research hierarchy; embracing cultural humility; practicing pragmatism and compassion; aiming to build equitable research partnerships with communities; acknowledging and promoting community strengths; and supporting relevant, sustainable, positive and community-led change.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Having a history of chronic homelessness according to the widely accepted federal definition (i.e., having a psychiatric, medical, or substance use disorder paired with being homeless for a year or more or having 4 or more episodes of homelessness in the past 3 years)
* Being a current DESC client living in 1 of 10 participating Housing First sites
Exclusion Criteria
* Constituting a risk to the safety and security of other clients or staff
21 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Washington State University
OTHER
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
NIH
University of Washington
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Seema Clifasefi
Associate Professor, School of Medicine: Psychiatry
Principal Investigators
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Seema L Clifasefi, PhD MSW
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Washington
Locations
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University of Washington - Harborview Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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STUDY00007048
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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