Recovery Legal Care Clinical Trial

Participation Deadline: 08/31/2027
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Description

National trauma center verification relies on a commitment to injury prevention efforts, including prevention of community-level violence. Hospital-Based Violence Recovery Programs (HVIPs) have expanded across the country as extensions of level I and II trauma centers to address trauma recidivism with individual behavioral modification during the “teachable moment.” There is little evidence that has demonstrated consistent effectiveness of this approach. One possible reason is the difficulty for community-based violence prevention specialists from HVIP programs to address the larger inequities in the Structural and Social Determinants of Health (SSDOH) that lead to violence through. Medical-Legal Partnership is one approach that has demonstrated evidence and success in improving health outcomes and reducing health-harming legal needs of patients, by connecting legal experts to medical experts for holistic care. This has yet to be done for trauma patients and has, to our knowledge, not been incorporated into any HVIP approach thus far. This clinical trial will evaluate the effectiveness of the HVIP-MLP model to address legal needs rooted in the SSDOH and improve violence-related outcomes. As secondary objectives, it will also evaluate whether the HVIP-MLP model can improve health-related quality of life, PTSD symptoms, and perceived stress among study participants. This novel HVIP-MLP approach has the potential to broadly impact the HVIP model to include an MLP component to all trauma centers for verification to support patients, families and providers alike in this important public health work.