| Literature DB >> 28899394 |
Molly M Simmons1,2, Benjamin G Fincke3,4, Mari-Lynn Drainoni3,4,5, Bo Kim3,6, Tom Byrne3,7, David Smelson3,8,9, Kevin Casey10, Marsha L Ellison3,9, Christy Visher11, Jessica Blue-Howells12, D Keith McInnes3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 600,000 persons are released from prison annually in the United States. Relatively few receive sufficient re-entry services and are at risk for unemployment, homelessness, poverty, substance abuse relapse and recidivism. Persons leaving prison who have a mental illness and/or a substance use disorder are particularly challenged. This project aims to create a peer mentor program to extend the reach and effectiveness of reentry services provided by the Department of Veterans' Affairs (VA). We will implement a peer support for reentry veterans sequentially in two states. Our outcome measures are 1) fidelity of the intervention, 2) linkage to VA health care and, 3) continued engagement in health care. The aims for this project are as follows: (1) Conduct contextual analysis to identify VA and community reentry resources, and describe how reentry veterans use them. (2) Implement peer-support, in one state, to link reentry veterans to Veterans' Health Administration (VHA) primary care, mental health, and SUD services. (3) Port the peer-support intervention to another, geographically, and contextually different state.Entities:
Keywords: Facilitation; Peer-support; Process mapping; Vulnerable populations
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28899394 PMCID: PMC5596492 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2572-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Overview of study design, data collection, and analysis
| Phase 1: contextual analysis of reentry environment and resources in Massachusetts | Phase 2: Massachusetts implementation of peer support | Phase 3: Pennsylvania implementation of peer support | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Study population | • 10 veterans released from incarceration | For intervention with veterans released from incarceration: | • For formative work: 10 veterans released from incarceration and 15 stakeholders |
| Recruitment of veterans | • Reentry outreach specialists approaching veterans they have recently served, and approaching veterans in prisons prior to their release | • Reentry outreach specialists approaching veterans prior to their release | • Reentry outreach specialists approaching veterans prior to their release |
| Data Sources, and Collection | • Veterans will each be interviewed 3 times (at 1-week, 1-month, and 6-months post-release) | • Health care utilization questionnaire with intervention veterans at baseline (week 1) and 6 months to capture information about VA and non-VA health service use. | • For contextual analysis an abbreviated version of Phase 1 in Massachusetts: veterans interviewed 2 times over a six-month period and stakeholders will be interviewed once. |
| Analysis | • Contextual network mapping and thematic analysis using grounded codes and a priori codes. | • Compare rates of visits for primary care, MH, SUD, no-shows between intervention and comparison groups; t-tests and chi-square tests. | • Same as for Massachusetts Phase 2 implementation of peer support |
| Outputs | • Network map to show reentry services, processes for linkage and delivery of services, and gaps in services | • Peer support guidebook | • Network map similar to approach used in Massachusetts |
| Timing | • Months 1–12 of trial | • Months 12–24 of trial | • Months 20–36 of trial |