Integrated care van delivery of evidence‐based services for people who inject drugs: A cluster‐randomized trial

Author:

Page Kathleen R.1,Weir Brian W.2,Zook Katie1,Rosecrans Amanda13,Harris Robert13,Grieb Suzanne M.1,Falade‐Nwulia Oluwaseun1,Landry Miles1,Escobar Wendy2,Ramirez Michael P.2,Saxton Ronald E.1,Clarke William A.1,Sherman Susan G.2,Lucas Gregory M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore MD USA

2. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD USA

3. Baltimore City Health Department Baltimore MD USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and aimsPeople who inject drugs (PWID) are at risk for adverse outcomes across multiple dimensions. While evidence‐based interventions are available, services are often fragmented and difficult to access. We measured the effectiveness of an integrated care van (ICV) that offered services for PWID.Design, setting and participantsThis was a cluster‐randomized trial, which took place in Baltimore, MD, USA. Prior to randomization, we used a research van to recruit PWID cohorts from 12 Baltimore neighborhoods (sites), currently served by the city's mobile needle exchange program.Intervention and comparatorWe randomized sites to receive weekly visits from the ICV (n = 6) or to usual services (n = 6) for 14 months. The ICV offered case management; buprenorphine/naloxone; screening for HIV, hepatitis C virus and sexually transmitted infections; HIV pre‐exposure prophylaxis; and wound care.MeasurementsThe primary outcome was a composite harm mitigation score that captured access to evidence‐based services, risk behaviors and adverse health events (range = 0−15, with higher numbers indicating worse status). We evaluated effectiveness by comparing changes in the composite score at 7 months versus baseline in the two study arms.FindingsWe enrolled 720 cohort participants across the study sites (60 per site) between June 2018 and August 2019: 38.3% women, 72.6% black and 85.1% urine drug test positive for fentanyl. Over a median of 10.4 months, the ICV provided services to 734 unique clients (who may or may not have been cohort participants) across the six intervention sites, including HIV/hepatitis C virus testing in 577 (78.6%) and buprenorphine/naloxone initiation in 540 (74%). However, only 52 (7.2%) of cohort participants received services on the ICV. The average composite score decreased at 7 months relative to baseline, with no significant difference in the change between ICV and usual services (difference in differences: −0.31; 95% confidence interval: −0.70, 0.08; P = 0.13).ConclusionsThis cluster‐randomized trial in Baltimore, MD, USA, found no evidence that weekly neighborhood visits from a mobile health van providing injection‐drug‐focused services improved access to services and outcomes among people who injected drugs in the neighborhood, relative to usual services. The van successfully served large numbers of clients but unexpectedly low use of the van by cohort participants limited the ability to detect meaningful differences.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

Publisher

Wiley

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