Testing Self-Directed Care in Florida
- Conditions
- Mental Disorder
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Services as usualBehavioral: Self-Directed Care
- Registration Number
- NCT05649449
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Illinois at Chicago
- Brief Summary
This study tests a psychosocial intervention called mental health self-directed care by assessing its impact on recovery, mental health status, rehabilitation outcomes, and service costs in the state of Florida.
- Detailed Description
With additional funding from the National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), a new cohort of 40 study subjects will be recruited in the state of Florida to test mental health self-directed care (SDC). SDC is a self-directed model of service delivery in which participants manage a personal budget from which they purchase goods and services, including specific types of mental health care, social supports, and items that allow them to recover their health and emotional wellness and live independently. Investigators are studying the impact of SDC on recovery, mental health status, rehabilitation outcomes, and service costs. Working with Lutheran Services Florida, a public managing entity coordinating mental health care management in northeastern and central Florida, adults with mental health conditions will be recruited into the study and randomly assigned to receive SDC for one year or continue receiving services as usual. Assessments will occur at baseline, 6- and 12-month followup.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 42
- Age 18 and older
- Serious mental illness
- Receiving services coordinated by behavioral health managing entity
- Cognitive impairment preventing informed consent
- Enrollment in Medicaid/Medicare
- Representative payeeship
- Court-mandated treatment
- Recent substance disorder crisis
- In residential treatment
- History of violent behavior in the past 10 years
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Control Services as usual Subjects receive routine mental health care from community agencies consisting of outpatient services coordinated at community behavioral health programs. Experimental Self-Directed Care Participants meet with self-directed care program staff called brokers to receive a program orientation, share perceptions of their current life situation and mental health status, and review past year behavioral health service use as well as participants' views of service helpfulness. This culminates in participants' choice of recovery goals and development of an individual budget to pay for for services and material goods directly related to recovery goals. After budget approval by the program supervisor, brokers make purchases. At quarterly meetings, brokers and participants discuss the latter's progress toward recovery goals and create the next quarter's budget. After receiving 12 months of SDC services, participants are helped to transition back to usual community mental health services.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in perceived competence for mental health self-management study entry (pre-intervention), 6-months (intervention mid-point), 12-months (immediate post-intervention) Perceived competence is measured with the Perceived Competence Scale that includes 4 items that assess subjects' self-rated ability to manage their mental health and recovery, with scores ranging from 4 to 28, with higher scores indicating greater perceived competence for mental health self-management.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in employment status study entry (pre-intervention), 6-months (intervention mid-point), 12-months (immediate post-intervention) Assessment of employment status using the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics definition of paid employment which ranges from 0 (no) to 1 (employed) where a higher score indicates employment.
Change in perception of service providers as supportive of client autonomy study entry (pre-intervention), 6-months (intervention mid-point), 12-months (immediate post-intervention) Change in provider support for client autonomy is measured by the Health Care Climate Questionnaire with 6 items that assess the degree to which subjects rate their services providers as encouraging autonomy by providing information, encouraging choice, and acknowledging subjects' emotions, with scores ranging from 6 to 42, with higher scores indicating more perceived autonomy support.
Change in self-rated recovery from mental illness study entry (pre-intervention), 6-months (intervention mid-point), 12-months (immediate post-intervention) Change in self-rated recovery is measured by the Recovery Assessment Scale with 41 items that assess perceived level of recovery from mental illness, with higher scores indicating greater recovery.
Change in service costs 12-month period of study participation Service cost is measured by the dollar amount of reimbursement paid by the behavioral health managing entity to a service provider or program for a paid claim for a discrete service with scores ranging from 0 dollars to no upper limit of dollars where higher scores indicate greater cost.
Change in met and unmet needs related to multiple life domains study entry (pre-intervention), 6-months (intervention mid-point), 12 months (immediate post-intervention) Change in met and unmet needs is measured with the Camberwell Assessment of Need Short Appraisal Schedule with 22 items that assess needs across multiple life domains such as psychological distress, general health, and finances, which results in 2 scores, each ranging from 0-22, with higher scores indicating more met needs or more unmet needs.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of Psychiatry
🇺🇸Chicago, Illinois, United States