SRSS: Using Smartphones to Provide Recovery Support Services

Sponsor
Chestnut Health Systems (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT02132481
Collaborator
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) (NIH)
401
3
4
69
133.7
1.9

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The primary goal of the proposed trial is to examine the effect of combining frequent self-monitoring via Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMAs) and automated interventions via Ecological Momentary Interventions (EMIs) provided by smartphone, on days of abstinence from drugs and alcohol and HIV risk behaviors over 6 months following treatment discharge. We will recruit 400 participants at discharge (both planned or unplanned) from Illinois' largest treatment organization and randomly assign them in a 2 x 2 factorial design to receive EMA only, EMI only, combined EMA+EMI, or neither (control). Participants in the 3 EMA and EMI groups will receive a smartphone and training after discharge. To help them self-monitor, individuals in the EMA groups will be randomly signaled 6 times daily for 6 months and asked to record their recent substance use, HIV risk behaviors (e.g., needle use, unprotected sex) and exposure to internal and external protective and risk factors, then to rate the extent to which these factors support their recovery or make them want to use drugs or alcohol. Individuals in the EMI groups will have 24/7 access to a smartphone recovery support system. In the combined EMA+EMI group, participants will receive feedback directly following completion of each 2-3 minute EMA, and EMA responses will be used to encourage EMI utilization. The primary hypotheses are

H1 Random assignment to a) EMA (vs. not), b) EMI (vs. not), and c) their interaction will be associated with more days of abstinence from drugs and alcohol over the 6 months post discharge.

H2 Random assignment to a) EMA, b) EMI, and c) their interaction will be a associated with fewer HIV risk behaviors over the 6 months post discharge.

H3 Days abstinent at 3 months post discharge will mediate the effects of a) EMA, b) EMI and

  1. their interaction on HIV Risk behavior at 6 months post discharge.
Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: EMA Only
  • Other: EMI Only
  • Other: EMA+EMI
  • Other: Neither - RSAU
N/A

Detailed Description

Nationwide cost estimates of 60 major illnesses place alcohol use disorders as the 2nd and drug use disorders as the 7th most costly health problems. Both are related to higher rates of HIV risk behaviors associated with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and together they represent 3 of the top 10 modifiable behavioral causes of mortality in the US. Studies indicate that effective strategies for managing substance use disorders (SUD) must address their chronic and cyclical nature, of which HIV risk is a part. For many, substance use creates circumstances that increase HIV risk (e.g., needle use, trading sex) and for others, substance use is a coping mechanism for the negative impact of lifestyle choices (e.g. illegal activity, losing custody of their children, trading sex). Post-discharge monitoring, feedback and early re-intervention have become standard practice when managing numerous chronic conditions.10 Mobile technology has the potential to radically improve the odds of sustained recovery by providing tools for ongoing monitoring, assessment and access to recovery support interventions anytime and anywhere. This is particularly important for the 90% of those needing treatment that don't receive it. Therefore applying smartphone technology to provide recovery management anytime anywhere is potentially significant.

Using their smartphone-based suite of relapse-prevention interventions , Gustafson and colleagues11 conducted an RCT with a sample of 350 adults with alcohol use disorders discharged from 2 residential substance abuse treatment programs and followed them for 12 months. Patients self-initiated access to the interventions 24/7; the type of interventions ranged from being professionally supported EMIs like "ask an expert" which allowed participants to receive personal responses to their questions from addiction experts to a Panic Button which triggered automated reminders to the participant and, alerts to key people (e.g., counselor, sponsor, family member) who may reach out to the participant via phone or in person. Their system was designed to support recovery by promoting autonomous motivation, coping competence, and relatedness.12 Relative to participants assigned to recovery support services as usual, those receiving the support system reported significantly fewer heavy drinking days and were more likely to be abstinent from alcohol at the end of the study.13-15 In addition, this study demonstrated that providing recovery support via smart phones is feasible for this population.

Despite these encouraging outcomes, the full potential of providing 24/7 access to recovery support via smartphones may not yet have been realized. For example, while participants rated themselves on protective and risk factors weekly, opportunities to intervene "in the moments of need" were lost if the individuals did not self-initiate use of the application, ratings were subject to recall bias, and "teachable moments" in which participants could have cognitively linked the risk factors to their desire or actual use were unexplored. More frequent monitoring of current circumstances (vs. past generalized week) using methods like Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) may be better suited to this context as they can improve one's level of self-monitoring, provide additional opportunities to intervene in the moment of risk, minimize recall bias and provide participants with the opportunity to learn more about the relationship between current circumstances and their use.16,17 The primary goal of the proposed trial is to examine the effect of combining more frequent self-monitoring via EMAs and automated interventions via Ecological Momentary Interventions (EMIs) provided by smartphone, on days of abstinence from drugs and alcohol and HIV risk behaviors over 6 months following treatment discharge.

We will recruit a total of 400 participants in 4 cohorts of 100 people from sequential discharges (both planned or unplanned) over 2 months starting in months 7, 19, 31, 43 and follow them for 6 months post discharge. Using urn randomization, we will randomly assign participants at discharge in a 2 x 2 factorial design to receive EMAs only, EMIs only, combined EMA+EMI or control (no EMA or EMI). Post-randomization, participants assigned to the EMA, EMI and combined EMA/EMI groups will receive a smartphone for 6 months with 450 call minutes, 500 text messages and unlimited data plan monthly. Those in the EMA only and EMA/EMI combined group will be asked at 6 randomly selected times each day (183 days total) to record their past-30-minutes involvement in HIV risk behaviors and substance use, and their exposure to internal and external risk and protective factors and rate the extent to which these factors support their recovery, make them want to use drugs and/or alcohol. Those in the EMI only and EMA/EMI combined group will have continuous access to a suite of smartphone based support services (EMIs). To minimize interference with treatment, phones will be issued and trainings will be done after discharge. To minimize potential contamination across conditions, trainings for each condition will occur on separate days. During the month following treatment discharge & training, participants in the three experimental groups will return to the research office 2 times a week for research staff to check participant's proficiency operating the phone and collect urine screens. To control for the effects of attention, the control group will also return to the research office 2 times a week for urine screens and a short survey on non-phone related topics. Research office visits and trainings will be done by Protocol Monitors (not interviewers). Research Interviewers blind to condition will conduct the discharge, 3 and 6 months post discharge interviews and urine tests. EMA and EMI utilization data will be electronically recorded immediately via a mobile/web application and used to track implementation.

The primary hypotheses are

H1 Random assignment to a) EMA (vs. not), b) EMI (vs. not), and c) their interaction will be associated with more days of abstinence from drugs and alcohol over the 6 months post discharge.

H2 Random assignment to a) EMA, b) EMI, and c) their interaction will be a associated with fewer HIV risk behaviors over the 6 months post discharge.

H3 Days abstinent at 3 months post discharge will mediate the effects of a) EMA, b) EMI and

  1. their interaction on HIV Risk behavior at 6 months post discharge.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
401 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Factorial Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Supportive Care
Official Title:
Using Smartphones to Provide Recovery Support Services Experiment
Study Start Date :
Jun 1, 2015
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Jan 31, 2018
Actual Study Completion Date :
Feb 28, 2021

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: EMA Only

See intervention

Other: EMA Only
The EMA only condition consists of: a) RSAU, b) an Android phone, c) a 6-hour EMA training on how to use the phone, HIV and SUD prevention, self-monitoring, procedures for completing the EMAs (see Appendix), d) an EMA signaling schedule covering 6 EMA prompts over a 16-hour time period per day tailored to each participant's schedule, e) research office visits twice a week during 1st month for staff to check participant's proficiency using the phone and completing EMAs, and f) collecting urine screens.
Other Names:
  • Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA)
  • Other: Neither - RSAU
    The "neither" smartphone condition will still have access to community recovery support as usual (RSAU). Standard discharge practice is to provide a recovery plan and relevant referrals. A recent RCT indicated that after leaving treatment, 37% of the clients attended self-help in the community, 41% participated in substance-free structured activities, and about 14% returned to treatment within 6 months. They will also participate in office visits twice a week during 1st month to complete non-phone related surveys and provide urine for screens.
    Other Names:
  • Recovery support as usual (RSAU)
  • Experimental: EMI Only

    See intervention

    Other: EMI Only
    The EMI only condition includes: a) RSAU, b) an Android phone, c) a 6-hour EMI training on how to use the phone, HIV and SUD prevention, how each EMI relates to relapse prevention or HIV risk reduction, and how to access each EMI, d) research office visits twice weekly in 1st month as described above except visits focus on EMIs, and e) collecting urine screens.
    Other Names:
  • Ecological Momentary Intervention (EMI)
  • Other: Neither - RSAU
    The "neither" smartphone condition will still have access to community recovery support as usual (RSAU). Standard discharge practice is to provide a recovery plan and relevant referrals. A recent RCT indicated that after leaving treatment, 37% of the clients attended self-help in the community, 41% participated in substance-free structured activities, and about 14% returned to treatment within 6 months. They will also participate in office visits twice a week during 1st month to complete non-phone related surveys and provide urine for screens.
    Other Names:
  • Recovery support as usual (RSAU)
  • Experimental: EMA+EMI

    See intervention

    Other: EMA Only
    The EMA only condition consists of: a) RSAU, b) an Android phone, c) a 6-hour EMA training on how to use the phone, HIV and SUD prevention, self-monitoring, procedures for completing the EMAs (see Appendix), d) an EMA signaling schedule covering 6 EMA prompts over a 16-hour time period per day tailored to each participant's schedule, e) research office visits twice a week during 1st month for staff to check participant's proficiency using the phone and completing EMAs, and f) collecting urine screens.
    Other Names:
  • Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA)
  • Other: EMI Only
    The EMI only condition includes: a) RSAU, b) an Android phone, c) a 6-hour EMI training on how to use the phone, HIV and SUD prevention, how each EMI relates to relapse prevention or HIV risk reduction, and how to access each EMI, d) research office visits twice weekly in 1st month as described above except visits focus on EMIs, and e) collecting urine screens.
    Other Names:
  • Ecological Momentary Intervention (EMI)
  • Other: EMA+EMI
    The combined condition includes: a) RSAU, b) an Android phone, c) the 6-hour EMA training, d) EMA signaling schedule, e) the 6-hour EMI training, f) research office visits 2 times a week during 1st month, and g) feedback following each EMA, which will include participants' current "risk of use in the next 7 days" .
    Other Names:
  • Combined Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA)
  • and Ecological Momentary Interventions (EMI)
  • Other: Neither - RSAU
    The "neither" smartphone condition will still have access to community recovery support as usual (RSAU). Standard discharge practice is to provide a recovery plan and relevant referrals. A recent RCT indicated that after leaving treatment, 37% of the clients attended self-help in the community, 41% participated in substance-free structured activities, and about 14% returned to treatment within 6 months. They will also participate in office visits twice a week during 1st month to complete non-phone related surveys and provide urine for screens.
    Other Names:
  • Recovery support as usual (RSAU)
  • Active Comparator: Neither - RSAU

    See intervention

    Other: Neither - RSAU
    The "neither" smartphone condition will still have access to community recovery support as usual (RSAU). Standard discharge practice is to provide a recovery plan and relevant referrals. A recent RCT indicated that after leaving treatment, 37% of the clients attended self-help in the community, 41% participated in substance-free structured activities, and about 14% returned to treatment within 6 months. They will also participate in office visits twice a week during 1st month to complete non-phone related surveys and provide urine for screens.
    Other Names:
  • Recovery support as usual (RSAU)
  • Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Days of Abstinence [3 and 6 months post discharge]

      Days of Abstinence (test-retest rho=.96)= Self-reported days of no drug or alcohol use summed across follow-up waves. An alternative measure is also available, the Substance Frequency Scale (SFS; alpha=.85; test-retest rho=.94), which is the average percent of days reported of any substance use, days of heavy substance use, days of problems from substance use, and days of alcohol, marijuana, crack/cocaine and heroin use. Will be over all 6 months for H1, over the first 3 months for H3.

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    1. EMA & EMI utilization [Continuous over 6 months post discharge]

      EMA & EMI utilization: Computer logs of the EMA responses and EMI utilization (including time/date stamps) will be used to document implementation.

    2. HIV Risk Behavior Index [Months 4-6 post discharge]

      HIV Risk Behavior Index (test-retest rho=.80)= A count of HIV risk behaviors in the past 90 days (any needle use, needle sharing, unprotected sex, multiple sexual partners, trading sex, victimization). Will be over all 6 months for H2, over the last 3 months for H3

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    18 Years and Older
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    No
    Inclusion Criteria:
    1. meet criteria for SUDs in year prior to treatment intake,

    2. alcohol or other drug use during the 90 days prior to treatment,

    3. discharged to the community (vs. jail or prison) from outpatient, intensive outpatient or residential treatment,

    4. age 18 or older,

    5. communicate in English or Spanish, and

    6. are cognitively able to provide informed consent.

    Exclusion Criteria:
    1. already live outside of Chicago

    2. plan to live outside of Chicago in the 6 months post discharge

    3. Expected to be in jail or prison or other setting that would prevent the use of smartphones during the 6 months post discharge

    4. Not able to use smartphone due to disability or health condition

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    Site City State Country Postal Code
    1 Haymarket Chicago Illinois United States 60607
    2 Chestnut Health Systems Chicago Illinois United States 60610
    3 Chestnut Health Systems Normal Illinois United States 61761

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • Chestnut Health Systems
    • National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

    Investigators

    • Principal Investigator: Christy K Scott, Ph.D., Chestnut Health Systems
    • Study Chair: William L White, M.A., Chestnut Health Systems

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    None provided.

    More Information

    Additional Information:

    Publications

    None provided.
    Responsible Party:
    Christy Scott, Director of Research and Development, Chestnut Health Systems
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT02132481
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • SRSS Experiment
    • R01DA035879
    First Posted:
    May 7, 2014
    Last Update Posted:
    Jul 28, 2021
    Last Verified:
    Jul 1, 2021
    Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
    Yes
    Plan to Share IPD:
    Yes
    Keywords provided by Christy Scott, Director of Research and Development, Chestnut Health Systems
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Jul 28, 2021