RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06071221

Improving the Mental Health of Home Health Aides

Improving the Mental Health of Home Health Aides: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial


Sponsor

Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Enrollment

100 participants

Start Date

Jan 27, 2025

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The goal of this study is to improve the mental health of home health aides, a workforce that provides care for adults at home but whose own health has been historically poor. The main questions the study aims to answer are: * Will a health program called Living Healthy, which provides health education and support with positive thinking, be used by home health aides and do they like it? * Does Living Healthy actually improve home health aides' mood compared to what they usually do to take care of themselves? Participants in the study will get an 8-week health program called Living Healthy over 3 months. Some of the participants will also have a 'peer coach' who is another home health aide who's been trained to help them with the program and learn some ways to feel better. The study will compare the experiences of home health aides who get Living Healthy plus a peer coach with those who only get the Living Healthy program.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study tests a mental health program designed specifically for home health aides — workers who care for others in their homes and often experience high stress, loneliness, and depression. The program aims to reduce mental health symptoms and improve wellbeing in this often-overlooked group of workers. **You may be eligible if...** - You are currently working as a home health aide - You are 18 or older - You speak English or Spanish - You have mild depression, elevated stress, or loneliness (based on short questionnaire scores) **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You speak a language other than English or Spanish - You have been working as a home health aide for less than 1 month - You have severe depression or are in a mental health crisis requiring urgent care Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

BEHAVIORALLiving Healthy educational program + peer coaching

The Living Healthy intervention is an 8-session health education program with cognitive behavioral training (CBT) techniques. For those in the interventional arm, the Living Healthy intervention program will be delivered by trained peer coaches by telephone or Zoom over 3 months. In this study, trained peer coaches are trained home health aides themselves. Informed by social cognitive theory (SCT), peer coaches train participants on cognitive behavior techniques and empower participants to adopt positive health behaviors through personalized goal setting, motivational interviewing, and peer modeling. Each content-based session incorporates principles of CBT, teaching participants to recognize and modify negative thinking and modifying outcome expectations through self-monitoring, reflection, and practice.

BEHAVIORALLiving Healthy educational program

Participants assigned to receive health education alone will be asked to read health education (online; covering aspects of the Living Healthy program) which corresponds to a weekly topic about health. They will be called by a research assistant each week to prompt them to do this and answer any questions they might have about the materials.


Locations(2)

1199 SEIU Home Care Industry Education Fund

New York, New York, United States

Weill Cornell Medicine

New York, New York, United States

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NCT06071221


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