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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07216963
NA

The Community Paramedic Response and Overdose Outreach With Supportive Medical-Legal Services Study

Sponsor: Duke University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to develop and test the CROSSROADS intervention. CROSSROADS is designed for people who have recently survived an opioid and/or stimulant-related non-fatal overdose and had contact with staff from a Community Paramedic (CP) program. Participants will be randomly placed into one of two groups: 1\) Standard of care from the CP program, or 2) CROSSROADS, which includes CP care plus a Medical-Legal Partnership (MLP). The MLP helps people with legal problems that can affect their health-- like issues with housing or public benefits. Researchers will test if the CROSSROADS intervention reduces drug use and involvement with the criminal legal system. People in the study will be followed for one year and asked to complete surveys at the beginning, and again at 1 month, 6 months, and 12 months.

Official title: The Community Paramedic Response and Overdose Outreach With Supportive Medical-Legal Services (CROSSROADS) Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

400

Start Date

2026-09

Completion Date

2030-08

Last Updated

2025-11-14

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Community Paramedic Standard of Care (CP SOC)

Participants randomized to CP SOC will receive 1) community paramedic standard of care after initial response to overdose; 2) Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD), harm reduction referrals, and linkages to health and social programs as needed; 3) long-term follow-up care with community paramedics in the field after initial contact.

BEHAVIORAL

CROSSROADS

The community paramedic (CP)standard of care (SOC) has three basic components across the sites. The core components of the CP SOC are that CPs: 1) are deployed via 911 as an opioid and/or stimulant overdose response; 2) provide Medications for Opioid Use Disorder (MOUD), harm reduction service referrals, and link patients to health and social programs as needed; and 3) provide long-term follow-up care in the field after initial contact. The CROSSROADS intervention will utilize these SOC aspects and build in technology-supported medical-legal partnerships (MLP) via Docs for Health (D4H) that identifies and addresses health-harming legal needs (HHLN). While CP SOC may refer to services that address some HHLN, the key component of the CROSSROADS intervention is the direct identification and addressing of HHLN via D4H.

Locations (4)

University of Miami

Miami, Florida, United States

Boston Medical Center

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Duke University

Durham, North Carolina, United States

University of Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States