Viewing Study NCT04924088



Ignite Creation Date: 2024-05-06 @ 4:14 PM
Last Modification Date: 2024-10-26 @ 2:06 PM
Study NCT ID: NCT04924088
Status: RECRUITING
Last Update Posted: 2024-05-16
First Post: 2021-06-04

Brief Title: Medical-legal Partnerships to Prevent Evictions and Homelessness Among Veterans
Sponsor: VA Office of Research and Development
Organization: VA Office of Research and Development

Study Overview

Official Title: Medical-legal Partnerships to Prevent Evictions and Homelessness Among Veterans
Status: RECRUITING
Status Verified Date: 2024-10
Last Known Status: None
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: False
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: None
Brief Summary: The legal team in medical-legal partnerships works with healthcare providers to improve their clients lives It is unknown whether this approach is better than providing usual legal services with no special emphasis on non-legal matters and no particular collaboration with healthcare providers The investigators propose to randomly assign 300 Veterans with housing-related legal problems to either legal help from a medical-legal partnership or help from lawyers in the community The investigators will follow the randomized Veterans in this study for one year to determine if there is a difference between the two groups of Veterans in their housing situations and their mental health The investigators will also interview Veterans in both groups about their experience of the legal services they have received
Detailed Description: Medical-legal partnership MLP is an innovative intervention that is being introduced both in and outside of the VA healthcare system The objective of the proposed project is to study whether MLPs improve housing for homeless Veterans MLPs represent a potentially effective rehabilitative model The VA has created interventions to help Veterans with criminal justice problems but there has been little attention on important civil legal problems such as evictions landlord disputes and rent arrears that may interfere with stable housing and health A number of community-based legal providers outside the VA are beginning to partner with VA medical centers to form MLPs to help Veterans address these civil legal issues

MLPs are especially important for Veterans whose psychiatric conditions make it more difficult for them to work with the legal system MLPs address problems with evictions and other housing-related issues within an integrated multidisciplinary framework encompassing the legal and mental health teams

The investigators experience and prior work with MLPs uniquely positions us to complete the proposed work The first VA MLP in the country was established between VA Connecticut and the Connecticut Veterans Legal Center This MLP will be the investigators study site and has become a model for other sites The investigators have already conducted a funded uncontrolled observational study and found that MLPs improve housing and mental health outcomes of Veterans However more rigorous research is needed on this model The investigators are proposing the first randomized controlled trial of VA MLP The results will help VA leadership make informed decisions about supporting the investment and expansion of MLPs as an intervention for Veterans

The ultimate goal of the proposed project is to evaluate the effectiveness of a community-based interdisciplinary intervention to address housing-related legal issues and support the rehabilitation of homeless and at-risk Veterans The results will inform the VA about the potential of integrating non-VA community legal providers into the VA healthcare system as a new interdisciplinary care model To achieve this goal the investigators have two main study aims

Aim 1 Evaluate the impact of MLP on housing outcomes primary mental health and social integration outcomes secondary There has been no randomized controlled trial of MLPs and this would be the first study of its kind The field of MLPs is in desperate need of more rigorous study and VA needs guidance on whether MLPs should be supported and promoted as an effective intervention The investigators recently completed an uncontrolled observational study of VA MLPs funded by the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation The current proposal represents a logical next step in the evidence hierarchy for MLPs In this current proposal the investigators plan to conduct a randomized controlled trial with 300 low-income Veterans with mental illness at VA Connecticut with a treatment group that receives on-site MLP services and a control group that receives outside legal assistance The investigators will enroll Veterans with housing-related legal issues including rent-based evictions rule violations and other landlord tenant disputes because of their potential impact on homeless and at-risk Veterans Participants will be followed for one year and the main outcome of interest will be their housing status after one year

A secondary outcome will be the change in mental health symptomatology over time as measured by the BASIS-R Because the investigators posit that MLPs especially benefit Veterans whose severe symptoms impair their ability to navigate the legal system in secondary analyses the investigators will test the extent to which mental health overall and psychotic symptom severity as measured by the BASIS-R moderate response to MLP assignment Based on MLPs posited impact on mental health service use and their fostering Veteran empowerment the investigators will test weeks using any VA mental health service and self-rated empowerment as potential mediators of treatment response

Aim 2 Examine the Veteran experience with seeking and receiving legal interventions The VA healthcare system is focused on understanding the Veteran experience and providing patient centered care MLPs are a new intervention it is important to examine how Veterans feel about the MLP intervention Additionally some Veterans do not have access to MLPs and they may seek assistance from other types of providers and services so it is also important to examine Veterans experiences when they dont have access to MLPs Therefore the investigators will include a qualitative component to complement the randomized controlled trial There is potentially rich qualitative data that will not be captured by the quantitative assessments collected in the randomized trial conducted for Aim 1 The investigators will interview a total of 30 participants- 15 participants each from the treatment and control groups The investigators will interview each participant twice once at 3- month follow-up and again at 6-month follow-up The results will shed light on initial and longer-term Veteran rehabilitation experiences with seeking and receiving assistance from MLP and outside legal providers for housing-related needs

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: None
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: False
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: False
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: False
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: None