Recovery Management Checkups for Opioid Use Disorder Experiment
NCT ID: NCT04365920
Last Updated: 2025-04-06
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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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
PHASE3
455 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-08-29
2025-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Re-Entry as Usual
The type and level of services provided to individuals at re-entry will vary across jails and will be carefully documented. For the most part, individuals released to the community will receive a referral to an opioid treatment provider (OTP) for treatment with MOUD, and a subset may potentially be mandated to participate in community based treatment and/or recovery programs such as recovery coaching, and/or sentenced to varying levels of probation.
No interventions assigned to this group
Recovery Management Checkups (RMC)
In the RMC condition, participants will have access to services provided as a part of re-entry as usual. In addition, checkups will be provided on a fixed schedule that includes face-to-face monthly checkups for the initial 3 months, and quarterly for the rest of the two years. Participants will have access to referrals and services provided by the jail and linkage to an OTP as part of their usual re-entry procedures. Individuals will meet with a Linkage Manager (LM) upon study enrollment and during each quarterly checkup, during which they will complete a Brief Treatment Needs Assessment, receive motivational interviewing, linkage assistance, or a check-in on continuing care and recovery support. The priority is to engage the individual into treatment with MOUD as soon as possible at the time of release, however, if individuals express a preference for another form of SUD treatment, the LM will work with that individual to link, engage, and retain them in that form of treatment.
Recovery Management Checkups (RMC)
The RMC model was designed to improve treatment linkage, engagement, and long-term treatment retention. The conceptual framework was based on the public health theory of chronic disease management, which utilizes ongoing assessment and monitoring through regular face-to-face checkups and early (re)intervention to facilitate detection of relapse, reduce the time to treatment re-entry, and consequently, improve long-term outcomes. The original RMC model includes: 1) a fixed schedule of face-to-face quarterly checkups to assess need for SUD treatment, 2) personalized feedback based on an assessment and motivational interviewing to increase treatment motivation, 3) problem solving around barriers to treatment access and retention, and 4) assistance with scheduling and linkage to treatment. Individuals were deemed to be in "need of treatment" if they reported weekly, or more frequent, substance use since the last checkup, any past-month SUD symptoms, or self-perceived need for treatment.
RMC-Adaptive
In the RMC-Adaptive condition, checkups will be provided based on the participant's current need for treatment and will be adapted in three ways. First, the interval between RMC-A check-ups will vary (in 1-month increments) depending upon the individual's assessed need for treatment at the prior check-up. Second, in cases where participants have 3 consecutive checkups in which they need treatment, the LM and treatment provider will discuss how to better meet the participant's needs, e.g., a different treatment provider, different type of MOUD or other types of treatment, and/or additional services. Third, if RMC-A participants are re-incarcerated at the time of their checkup, the LM will meet with the individual while incarcerated to discuss a recovery plan, which may include initiation of treatment with MOUD while incarcerated and re-linkage to an OTP upon release.
RMC-Adaptive
Participants in the RMC-Adaptive group will receive face-to-face monthly checkups during the first 2 months post-release with additional face-to-face checkups dependent upon the participant's progress. Based on the data presented in the prior section, as long as participants need treatment, they will receive monthly checkups.
In addition, for every checkup that a participant does NOT need treatment, the number of months before the next checkup will be increased by 1 month (e.g., after 2 checkups without need, they will receive the next checkup 2 months later, after 3 it will be 3 months, after 4 it will be 4 months, and so on). Based on these decision rules, individuals who have NO treatment need over 24 months will still receive 5 checkups.
Interventions
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Recovery Management Checkups (RMC)
The RMC model was designed to improve treatment linkage, engagement, and long-term treatment retention. The conceptual framework was based on the public health theory of chronic disease management, which utilizes ongoing assessment and monitoring through regular face-to-face checkups and early (re)intervention to facilitate detection of relapse, reduce the time to treatment re-entry, and consequently, improve long-term outcomes. The original RMC model includes: 1) a fixed schedule of face-to-face quarterly checkups to assess need for SUD treatment, 2) personalized feedback based on an assessment and motivational interviewing to increase treatment motivation, 3) problem solving around barriers to treatment access and retention, and 4) assistance with scheduling and linkage to treatment. Individuals were deemed to be in "need of treatment" if they reported weekly, or more frequent, substance use since the last checkup, any past-month SUD symptoms, or self-perceived need for treatment.
RMC-Adaptive
Participants in the RMC-Adaptive group will receive face-to-face monthly checkups during the first 2 months post-release with additional face-to-face checkups dependent upon the participant's progress. Based on the data presented in the prior section, as long as participants need treatment, they will receive monthly checkups.
In addition, for every checkup that a participant does NOT need treatment, the number of months before the next checkup will be increased by 1 month (e.g., after 2 checkups without need, they will receive the next checkup 2 months later, after 3 it will be 3 months, after 4 it will be 4 months, and so on). Based on these decision rules, individuals who have NO treatment need over 24 months will still receive 5 checkups.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* reports heroin or other opioid use in the 90 days prior to entering jail
* is released from 1 of the participating jails.
Exclusion Criteria
* has cognitive impairment that precludes ability to give informed consent
* resides outside the service area.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Chestnut Health Systems
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Michael L. Dennis, Ph.D.
Director of Research and Development
Principal Investigators
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Michael L Dennis, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Chestnut Health Systems
Locations
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Chestnut Health Systems-Lighthouse Institute
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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1135-0519
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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