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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT04601064
NA

Peer Supported Collaborative Care Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Care

Sponsor: Johns Hopkins University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a research study to assess the effectiveness of a peer-led collaborative care model for integrating treatment for substance use and or mental health disorders into HIV care settings. Depending on whether or not participants enroll in this study, participants will be assigned randomly (by chance, like drawing a number from a hat) to one of two groups. In group 1, participants would receive usual clinical care. In group 2, participants would work with a peer-case manager who would help support participants to engage in substance use or mental health disorder care. Regardless of the group participants are in, participants will fill out a survey when first enrolled in the study, and then again 12 months later.

Official title: Peer Supported Collaborative Care to Increase Engagement in Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Care in HIV Care Settings

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 99 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

405

Start Date

2022-04-20

Completion Date

2026-12-15

Last Updated

2026-01-12

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Collaborative Care Model

Collaborative care (CC) is an evidence-based model of integrated mental health and substance use disorder care endorsed by the American Psychiatric Association for the integration of mental health and substance use disorder care into primary care settings. CC includes the following components: 1) A collaborative care team of multidisciplinary health care providers consisting of the primary physician, a care manager and a consulting psychiatrist, providing care in a coordinated fashion; 2) A population focus with the team working together to provide care and continuously measure and track health outcomes of a defined population of patients; 3) A measurement-guided approach with systematic use of disease specific patient reported outcome measures, such as symptom rating scales like the PHQ-9 to drive clinical decision making; and 4) Evidence-based practices with the team adapting scientifically proven treatments within an individual clinical context to achieve improved health outcomes.

Locations (1)

Johns Hopkins Hospital

Baltimore, Maryland, United States