Treatment for Individuals Interacting with the Criminal Justice System
- Conditions
- Suicide RiskPsychiatric Disorders
- Interventions
- Other: Family and Social Justice Service and Navigator (FSJS+Navigator) InterventionOther: Treatment as usual (TAU)Other: Family and Social Justice
- Registration Number
- NCT06564948
- Lead Sponsor
- Cambridge Health Alliance
- Brief Summary
The proposed Center will leverage burgeoning real-time data linkage capabilities among health systems, Medicaid payors, and criminal legal (e.g., jail booking data, jail release data) systems, to identify individuals coming in and out of jail for suicide assessment and prevention, and to better coordinate care across these disparate systems. This Center will advance the fields of suicide prevention and criminal legal system-based mental health by solving a well-known, central problem in both fields: the inability to track and intervene with individuals moving in and out of both and often multiple systems. The goal is near-term reductions in the U.S. suicide rate.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 1040
-
Treatment as Usual (TAU) arm
- Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) patients from the cities other than Cambridge considered to be in the "catchment area" of CHA (Everett, Chelsea, Somerville, Medford, Malden, and Winthrop)
- Ages 18-100
- Identified as having police involvement between 2009 and 2019. Treatment as Usual patients will be identified using "targeted limited chart review methods" used in our prior studies, "scraping" clinical notes in the Electronic Health Records for criminal justice involvement. Initial Identification terms, "police", "arrest", "court", "summons", "jail", and "crime" will be used to identify candidates for police involvement, downloading the sentence in which the keyword appeared and the sentence before and after. Next, an iterative process of editing of the search terms will be conducted to remove patients with negation of the keyword ("did not commit a crime"), and other sentence characteristics that generate false positives ("cardiac arrest"). Samples of the resulting dataset will be taken, accuracy assessed by examining the surrounding sentences, leading to further iterations and repetition of the process until a high level of accuracy is achieved.
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Family and Social Justice Section (FSJS) arm
- Cambridge Health Alliance patients from Cambridge
- Ages 18-100
- Individuals who have come into contact with the Cambridge Police Department (as identified in the Family and Social Justice Section data) between 2009 and 2019.
-
Family and Social Justice Section plus Navigator (FSJS+Navigator) arm
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Recruited during the study period in the CHA ED
-
Ages 18-100
-
Individuals who are brought into the Emergency Department under police supervision (excluding individuals currently incarcerated)
- involuntarily brought to the Emergency Department for psychiatric evaluation because they are considered to be a risk to themselves or others (MA Law 123(12)); or
- the subject of a police call for service for a mental health issue who are willingly admitted to the Emergency Department
-
Exclusion Criteria
-
Treatment as Usual (TAU) arm
- Cambridge Health Alliance patients residing in the City Cambridge are excluded from the TAU arm
- Under the age of 18
- Individuals with no identified criminal legal system contact during the study time period (no criminal legal involvement found in the targeted limited chart review method).
- Any individual incarcerated at the Middlesex Jail/Prison that has not been released by the end of the period of data collection (December 31, 2019).
-
Family and Social Justice Section (FSJS) arm
- Cambridge Health Alliance patients outside of Cambridge will be excluded from the FSJS arm
- Under the age of 18
- Any individual incarcerated at the Middlesex Jail/Prison that has not been released by the end of the period of data collection (December 31, 2019)
-
Family and Social Justice Section plus Navigator (FSJS+Navigator) arm
-
Under the age of 18
-
Any individual who becomes incarcerated during the course of the study
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Individuals who enter the Emergency Department not under police supervision
- For example, individuals will be excluded who voluntarily come to the ED seeking psychiatric care because they feel they may be a risk to themselves or others
- Individuals brought to the ED from a jail or court ordered to the ED as an alternative to jail or prison
-
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SEQUENTIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description FSJS + Navigator Family and Social Justice Service and Navigator (FSJS+Navigator) Intervention 30 patients recruited during the study period in the Cambridge Health Alliance Emergency Department (ED) Ages 18-100 Individuals who are brought into the ED under police supervision (excluding individuals currently incarcerated) involuntarily brought to the ED for psychiatric evaluation because they are considered to be a risk to themselves or others (MA Law 123(12)); or the subject of a police call for service for a mental health issue who are willingly admitted to the ED Treatment as usual (TAU) Treatment as usual (TAU) This arm will consist of 2160 eligible individuals identified to have had criminal legal involvement in Cambridge Health Alliance catchment area cities other than Cambridge (Everett, Somerville, Malden, Medford, Chelsea, Revere, Winthrop). Police departments in these Treatment as Usual cities have no programs that link police officers and clinicians to follow up on safety planning and services. These individuals will be identified as having police involvement between 2009 and 2019. Family and Social Justice Section (FSJS) Family and Social Justice Consists of 200 Cambridge Health Alliance Patients Ages 18-100 Individuals who have come into contact with the Cambridge Police Department (as identified in the Family and Social Justice Section data) between 2009 and 2019.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Past-year medically treated suicide attempt at baseline and 12 months Baseline and 12 months Number of participants with a past-year medically treated suicide attempt. This will be measured at baseline and 12 months will be collected using the electronic health record (EHR) data.
Suicide Severity and Behaviors using Computerized Adaptive Test Suicide Scale (CAT-SS) at Baseline and 12 Months Baseline and 12 months The CAT-SS measures Severity of Suicide Risk will be assessed using CAT-SS, providing severity on a 0-100 point scale, and risk-stratification to negligible, intermediate and high risk. It is highly sensitive and specific to the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, and predicts future suicide events with high precision and accuracy.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of Individual Interactions with the Criminal Legal System at Baseline and 12 Months From enrollment through 12 months Number of calls about each individual to the Cambridge Police Department (CPD) Number of arrests Number of admissions to the Middlesex County Jail Repeat admission to the Middlesex County Jail
Number of Individual Interactions between Hospitals and the Criminal Justice System at Baseline and 12 Months From enrollment through 12 months Number of involuntary hospitalizations that require Cambridge Police Department (CPD) interaction
Frequency of Healthcare Services Used by Patients at Baseline and 12 Months From enrollment through 12 months Number of Emergency Department visits Number of behavioral health inpatient visits Number of behavioral health outpatient mental health (MH) visits
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Cambridge Health Alliance
🇺🇸Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States