Improving the Mental Health of Home Health Aides

Participation Deadline: 06/01/2026
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Description

The overall goal of the proposed project is to improve the mental health of home health aides, one of the fastest growing sectors of the healthcare industry, comprised predominantly of middle-aged women of color with high levels of stress, depressive symptoms, and emotional exhaustion. Improving home health aides’ mental health and well-being is not only critical to their own longevity as a workforce, but it has the potential to improve the health of the patients for whom they care. The investigators propose adapting the Living Healthy intervention, a 8-session peer coach-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy program on healthy habits, to the home health aide workforce and pilot testing it. The specific aim of this study is to conduct a 2-arm pilot randomized control trial among 100 home health aides (intervention arm: 50; enhanced usual care arm: 50) to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the intervention compared to enhanced usual care (education on healthy habits alone). The primary hypothesis is that the intervention will be feasible (>80% of aides will complete the program) and acceptable (>90% of aides will report high levels of satisfaction). The secondary hypothesis is that participants who receive the intervention arm will experience fewer depressive symptoms at follow-up, compared to those in the control arm. Most of the study will be conducted virtually, while initial onboarding may be in-person.