Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06200012

Multi-Level Stigma Intervention for Mental Health Services

Multi-Level Stigma Intervention to Improve Access to Substance Use Care With Prescribing Providers in Mental Health Settings

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
12 (actual)
Sponsor
Wayne State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This cluster randomized trial develops and pilot tests a multi-level substance use stigma intervention that leverages organizational policy and professional education to address structural and professional drivers of stigma in outpatient mental health (MH) services. The investigators will generate preliminary data to determine whether adding an organizational policy to a professional stigma training may reduce measures of provider-based stigma towards substance use and improve care quality and patient outcomes to a greater degree than simply conducting training alone. The investigators hypothesize that providers at a MH site implementing an organizational policy change in addition to providing professional training will demonstrate greater improvement to health services for people who use drugs compared to a site where providers receive training alone.

Detailed description

Substance use is commonly stigmatized, even in health settings. Stigma toward people who use drugs (PWUD) arises from multiple sources, including policies and individuals who carry out policies ("structural stigma") and health professionals ("provider-based stigma"). This study seeks to answer the question of whether addressing organizational-level structural stigma toward PWUD enhances the behavioral effects of stigma training among professionals providing mental health (MH) services. This study will have two intervention groups: A MH clinic where the providers receive only the educational intervention and a MH clinic where the providers receive both the educational intervention and an organizational policy change. The investigators hypothesize that providers at a MH site implementing an organizational policy change in addition to providing professional training will demonstrate greater improvement to health services for PWUD compared to a site where providers receive training alone. Only a small body of research develops and evaluates interventions seeking to reduce structural and provider-based stigma toward PWUD in healthcare settings or investigates the impact of such interventions on provision of evidence-based interventions like substance use disorder (SUD) pharmacotherapy. Little is known about substance use stigma in MH settings in particular, although some research suggests psychiatrist stigma toward dual diagnosis patients is greater than toward patients with either a SUD or MH diagnosis alone. Extant studies on stigma toward PWUD in healthcare found educational interventions incorporating critical reflection techniques and contact with PWUD significantly reduced provider-based stigma. But most provider-based stigma intervention studies have two major weaknesses: 1) failing to address structural drivers of stigma, such as organizational policies motivating attitudes and behaviors, and 2) falling short of practical application because they largely focus on professional attitudes without measuring changes to service provision. The investigators propose to pilot test a multi-level stigma intervention that leverages what existing research suggests works in professional stigma education, and adds a novel component of organizational policy change within a MH clinic. Because so little research exists on organizational-level stigma interventions, the investigators will use an inductive approach to identify a promising feasible policy that may reduce stigma toward PWUD. Our pilot testing will assess the extent to which combining interventions that modify structural/organizational and individual/professional-level drivers of stigma in outpatient MH services may improve not only attitudes but also health service provision to PWUD.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMulti-level stigma reduction intervention: educational training plus controlled substance agreement policy changePairing a professional training targeting known attitudinal and knowledge drivers of substance use stigma with a policy altering potentially stigmatizing features of controlled substance agreements.
BEHAVIORALSingle-level stigma reduction intervention: educational trainingA professional training targeting known attitudinal and knowledge drivers of substance use stigma

Timeline

Start date
2023-11-06
Primary completion
2024-02-08
Completion
2025-02-08
First posted
2024-01-10
Last updated
2025-10-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06200012. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.