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Completed SBIR-STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Innovating Technology Solutions for Residents in Supportive Housing Communities with SUD through Community-Engaged Research

$2.96M USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUSE
Recipient Organization Oregon Res Behavioral Intervention Strat
Country United States
Start Date Jul 01, 2024
End Date Jun 30, 2025
Duration 364 days
Number of Grantees 3
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10918900
Grant Description

Project Summary Substance use disorders (SUD) are both a cause and a consequence of housing instability for more than 30% of people and 60% of people experiencing housing instability report a history of SUD. Improving housing stability for people with SUD requires evidence-based support to improve retention in permanent

supportive housing (PSH). Despite the need for additional support, housing staff are often under-resourced to provide the intensive care needed for housing residents. As a result, residents often do not have the skills to integrate into a new housing context and property owners create and uphold untenable requirements for lease

which together lead to lease violations and a return to housing instability. Technology offers a relative advantage to staff delivery in the context of workforce shortages and capacity challenges to facilitate person- centric, standardized, evidence-based support to residents with SUD. The proposed research seeks to address

the need for support for people with SUD in housing communities, with a focus on harm reduction principles and enhancing access to evidence-based strategies including cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) informed skills and contingency management (CM) to improve individual stability. Voice-based assistants delivered by

smart speakers (e.g., Amazon Alexa and Echo) offer an accessible format for teaching skills and incentivizing engagement. The primary goal of the proposed solution is to augment the support accessible to people with SUD in housing communities to improve resident stability. We plan to accomplish this goal by using smart

speakers to teach residents how to apply harm reduction principles through CBT informed skills to real world challenges. Additionally, we will incentivize participation through CM and provide staff resources to support intervention uptake. We will demonstrate feasibility through a proof-of concept prototype. Our specific aims are

(1) Collaborate with community partners in housing communities to understand determinants of intervention implementation through a community-based participatory research approach, leveraging the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. This formative work will include developing a collaborative board of housing staff and people with lived/living experience to iteratively co-design the product

and identify approaches to implementation. (2) Create content for residents as an application prototype. The content will include two weeks of smart speaker-delivered educational content for residents on CBT skills and its application to tasks of daily living. It will also include a subset of educational modules for housing

program staff to feel confident in sharing the program with residents and help them to understand program data to better support residents. (3) Evaluate the usability, acceptability, feasibility, and effectiveness of the application prototype by assessing 25 residents on acceptability, usability, and knowledge gain. We will

also assess usability of an existing harm reduction education intervention for staff to prepare for Phase II adaptation.

All Grantees

Oregon Res Behavioral Intervention Strat

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