From Addiction to Employment.
- Conditions
- Substance Use Disorders
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Individual Placement and Support
- Registration Number
- NCT04289415
- Lead Sponsor
- Oslo University Hospital
- Brief Summary
Patients with substance use disorders have low employment rates and are to a large extent on the outside of the ordinary labor market. Individual Placement and Support (IPS) is an evidence based method developed to aid persons with severe mental disorders in obtaining ordinary work. IPS has been used clinically in the addiction field, but has been subject to little research. The trial "From addiction to employment" is a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effect of an IPS intervention on employment outcome among substance use disorder patients in specialized health care treatment in Oslo, Norway. The study is conducted at the Department for Substance Use Disorder Treatment at Oslo University Hospital. The trial begins to include patients March 1st 2020 and will include for two years, until February 28th 2022.
- Detailed Description
The target population in this project is patients in SUD treatment who wish to gain employment. The goal of the study is to determine the effectiveness of IPS in helping persons with SUD obtain ordinary employment. A pragmatic, two-arm, parallel, superiority, randomized controlled trial will be conducted. The project is financed through innovation funding from the South Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority, the Norwegian Directorate of Health and internal resources from OUS. Participants will be allocated randomly to either an employment specialist whom they will have individual contact with for the coming 13 months or shorter (intervention), or to a self-help and four-sessions work shop intervention (control comparison). The intervention fidelity will be assessed by external evaluators according to the Norwegian translation of the IPS Fidelity Scale. Patients will be recruited to the study over a period of two years, and followed for 18 months my data collection and up until 10 years in national registries.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 200
- In treatment, unemployed, want to obtain ordinary, competitive employment
- coercive treatment that disables the patient to engage in the intervention
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Individual Placement and Support Individual Placement and Support The intervention used in this study will be a time-limited version of IPS. The employment specialist offers up until nine months job-search support and four months in-work support, giving a total of 13 months job-related support. If a participant succeeds in obtaining work before nine months has passed the remaining job-search support months may be transferred to in-work support time. In the follow-up time while seeking employment, the employment specialists will work with the participants to identify skills and aspirations, establish contact with potential employers and ensure economic advice and help with benefits planning. The in-work support involves individual and regular contact with the participant and the employer. All participants who receive this intervention will do so in addition to their clinical treatment. The treatment provider and the employment specialist should cooperate and clarify roles together with the patient. Selv help kit and work shop Individual Placement and Support The participants in the control intervention will be offered a self-help tool kit and a following introduction course to help participants see what their opportunities are, and specific tips on how to get further help. The course will last three hours a session over four days, with the offer of an individual one hour follow up session with the course leader when the course is over. The goal of the control group intervention is to enable the participants to make use of the services offered at the ordinary labor and welfare service.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Any employment From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial At least 1 day of competitive employment
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Total time worked From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial Number of days/hours worked
Mental distress From inclusion in the trial and at different time points up until 12 month after inclusion in the trial Information obtained from the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (minumum score is 0, maximum score is 42, higher score means worse outcome)
Past month substance use From inclusion in the trial and at different time points up until 12 month after inclusion in the trial Information obtained from the European Addiction Severity Index
Participants' quality of life From inclusion in the trial and at different time points up until 12 month after inclusion in the trial Information obtained from the EQ-5D-5L
Employment relevant activity From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial Whether the participant is engaged in education, training or other job-preparing activity
Participants' work related quality of life From inclusion in the trial and at different time points up until 12 month after inclusion in the trial Information obtained from the Work and Social Adjustment Scale (minimum score is 0, maximum score is 40, higher score means more impairment)
Time to employment From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial Time from inclusion in the trial to first employment
Number of jobs From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial Number of different jobs kept
Job duration From inclusion in the trial to 18 month after inclusion in the trial Duration of longest employment
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Department for Substance Use Treatment, Oslo University Hospital
🇳🇴Oslo, Norway