The Safety-Net Approach

Overview

The Safety-Net project, is intended to disrupt disparities in mental health treatment access for children at-risk for childhood trauma (ACEs) and/or serious emotional disturbance (SED). "Safety Net" will use mobile clinical and family support teams to improve mental health outcomes. This clinical innovation, nested in an integrated system-of-care will be piloted for children, ages 3-18 yrs., with SED who receive primary care through Cambridge Health Alliance.

Full Title of Study: “The Safety-Net Approach: Weaving a Community-based System-of-Care to Improve Child Mental Outcomes”

Study Type

  • Study Type: Interventional
  • Study Design
    • Allocation: Non-Randomized
    • Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
    • Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
    • Masking: None (Open Label)
  • Study Primary Completion Date: July 31, 2024

Detailed Description

The Safety-Net project, is intended to disrupt disparities in mental health treatment access for children at-risk for childhood trauma (ACEs) and/or serious emotional disturbance (SED). "Safety Net" will use mobile clinical and family support teams to improve mental health outcomes. This clinical innovation, nested in an integrated system-of-care will be piloted for children, ages 3-18 yrs., with SED who receive primary care through Cambridge Health Alliance. Massachusetts had the highest rate of child abuse and neglect in the US during 2016 (DHHS, 2017). Approximately, 25% of these children live below the federal poverty level (American Community Survey, 2011-2013). The "gateway" cities this study targets in Metro-Boston (Malden and Everett) have 2-3 times the rate of foreign-born residents (43% vs. 15%) compared to the rest of the MA, and twice the statewide rate of children whose parental language is not English (54% vs. 22.3%). Together, SED and ACEs put children at much higher risk for adverse health and mental health outcomes in childhood and beyond. CHA's Children's Health Initiative (CHI) leadership will combine evidence-based interventions from its earlier MHSPY program (family support, care management and shared goals) with new strategies, such as interdisciplinary child mental health evaluation teams, all within primary care. Clinical expertise will be combined with peer-to-peer parent/guardian support for trauma-informed care delivery to both parent and child. All aspects of the care continuum will be provided in a culturally and linguistically competent manner, with child and family-driven care planning. Overall, the program will be sited in two cities, supported by a larger, specialized system of care involving state and local child serving agencies, schools and community-resources. The study team anticipates serving 248 children and families in total, at approximately 70 children per year. Program goals include: 1) Promote earlier recognition of child mental health needs; 2) Family-driven assessment approach to offset disparities in treatment engagement and outcomes; 3) Facilitate state, local and care planning team coordination and collaboration using SOC principles. Objectives: 1) Assess presence of SED (Serious Emotional Disturbance) via Standardized measures of Clinical Functioning (CGAS and CAFAS) 2) Screen for adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) by use of modified ACE-Q tool, 3) Increase access to child mental health evaluation and treatment using Pre-post measures of patterns of service use for study participants and Assessment of patterns of care for propensity-score weighted comparison group, 4) Improve family care experience, as measured by Baseline and follow-up Family Professional Partnership Scale assessments, 5) Improve clinical functioning, as measured by Baseline and follow-up CGAS and CAFAS assessments. Safety-Net's goals align with CHA's goals within its Accountable Care Organization contract with MassHealth, thus offering a chance to measure and evaluate outcomes for a customized system-of-care for some of the state's most vulnerable populations.

Interventions

  • Behavioral: Safety-Net Care Team Model
    • “Safety-Net” Care Planning Team: Clinical expertise will be combined with peer-to-peer parent/guardian support for trauma-informed care delivery to both parent and child. All aspects of the care continuum will be provided in a culturally and linguistically competent manner, with child and family-driven care planning.

Arms, Groups and Cohorts

  • Active Comparator: Safety-Net Intervention
  • No Intervention: Treatment as Usual

Clinical Trial Outcome Measures

Primary Measures

  • Changes in Child and Adolescent Functional Assessment Scale (CAFAS) Score
    • Time Frame: Comparative analysis of baseline and follow-up clinical functioning scores (baseline collected at enrollment, follow-up assessments collected at 6 months and 12 months)
    • Measurement of clinical functioning using Child and Adolescent Functional Assessment Scale (CAFAS). Trends from baseline to 6 months and 12 months will be examined to identify improvement, decline, or no change in clinical functioning. The CAFAS measure indicates the level of clinical functioning, on a scale of 0-140, where scores above 40 indicate clinical need.
  • Changes in Children’s Global Assessment Scale (CGAS) Score
    • Time Frame: Comparative analysis of baseline and follow-up clinical functioning scores (baseline collected at enrollment, follow-up assessments collected at 6 months and 12 months)]
    • Measurement of clinical functioning using Children’s Global Assessment Scale (CGAS). Trends from baseline to 6 months and 12 months will be examined to identify improvement, decline, or no change in clinical functioning. The CGAS measure provides a single global rating only, on scale of 0-100, where scores below 60 indicate clinical need.
  • Family perceptions of care using the Family Professional Partnership Scale (FPPS).
    • Time Frame: Analysis of baseline and follow-up family perceptions of care (baseline collected at enrollment, follow-up assessments collected at 6 months and 12 months)]
    • Qualitative assessment of family perceptions of care using the Family Professional Partnership Scale (FPPS). The anchors of items rated on satisfaction are rated on a 5-point likert scale, where 1 = very dissatisfied, 3 = neither satisfied nor dissatisfied, and 5 = very satisfied wherein the higher the value represents a better outcome.
  • Access to child mental health and substance abuse (MH/SA) care
    • Time Frame: Comparative analysis of access to care trends (0-6 months)
    • Comparing service Use Data from Electronic Health Records and Claims for intervention group versus controls
  • Engagement in child mental health and substance abuse (MH/SA) treatment
    • Time Frame: Comparative analysis of service use trends (6-12 months)
    • Comparing service Use Data from Electronic Health Records and Claims for intervention group versus controls

Participating in This Clinical Trial

Inclusion Criteria

  • 3 through 18 years (17½ years maximum at time of enrollment) – Referred by PCP's from one of the three CHA Safety Net primary care sites (Malden Family Medicine Center, Windsor Street Health Center and Broadway Care Center) to the Safety Net team for an integrated child mental health and/or substance use disorder clinical assessment. – Positive screen on CHA's standard pediatric mental health and substance use screening instruments, and/or parental concern about possible mental health/substance use needs, and/or PCP concern about possible mental health/substance use needs – Enrolled in MassHealth Exclusion Criteria:

  • Subjects over 17.5 years (SAMHSA data collection required at 6 and 12 months after enrollment which must occur before age 18 years.) – Youth who are not enrolled in MassHealth – CHA patients with PCP located at CHA primary care site other than three identified intervention sites (Malden, Windsor, Broadway)

Gender Eligibility: All

Minimum Age: 3 Years

Maximum Age: 18 Years

Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted: No

Investigator Details

  • Lead Sponsor
    • Cambridge Health Alliance
  • Provider of Information About this Clinical Study
    • Principal Investigator: Katherine Grimes MD, Associate Professor, Psychiatry; Director, Children’s Health Initiative – Cambridge Health Alliance
  • Overall Contact(s)
    • Katherine E Grimes, MD, MPH, 617-806-8718, katherine_grimes@hms.harvard.edu

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