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Evaluating Interventions for Intimate Partner Violence Use in Washington State

NCT06526247 · Boston University
In plain English

Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.

About this study
Intimate partner violence (IPV), specifically physical and psychological aggression toward an intimate partner, represents a public health crisis that affects millions of Americans each year. There currently exists very little evidence from randomized controlled trials for the effectiveness of abuser intervention programs designed to prevent and end perpetration of IPV in the general population. This is troubling considering that approximately half a million men and women are court-mandated to these programs each year. The investigators will conduct a randomized control trial (RCT) investigating the efficacy of the Strength at Home (SAH) intervention in reducing intimate partner violence (IPV). The overarching aim of this study is to test the efficacy of SAH with court-involved-partner-violent men through an RCT comparing those who receive SAH with those who receive other standard IPV interventions offered in the state of Washington (treatment as usual- TAU). The specific aims are: 1.1: Compare the frequency of physical and psychological IPV, the primary outcomes of interest, across conditions as reported by the male participants and their intimate partners across Time 1 (baseline) and four 3-month follow ups (Times 2-5). It is expected that greater reductions in IPV frequencies will be evidenced in SAH than TAU over the course of the year. 1.2: Compare symptoms of PTSD, alexithymia, and alcohol use problems across conditions and assessment time points as reported by the male participants. It is expected that greater reductions in these symptoms will be evidenced in SAH than TAU over the course of the year. 1.3: Compare treatment satisfaction across conditions as reported by the male participants across the four 3-month follow ups (Times 2-5). It is expected that treatment satisfaction will be higher in SAH than TAU.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Men: 1. Identify as a man 2. Provide consent for the research team to contact his intimate partner(s) for data collection purposes; 3. Court-referred for IPV intervention in Washington state Women: 1. Identify as a woman 2. Were or currently are an intimate partner involved in an incident of IPV with a court-referred participant Exclusion Criteria: 1. demonstrates active psychosis that may interfere with their ability to participate in group 2. expresses prominent suicidal or homicidal ideation that requires hospitalization 3. does not possess proficiency in spoken English 4. periods of incarceration after study enrollment
Study design
Enrollment target: 800 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2024-11-18
Estimated completion: 2027-07
Last updated: 2025-07-29
Interventions
Behavioral: Strength at Home (SAH)Behavioral: Treatment as usual for IPV
Primary outcomes
  • IPV assessment (Baseline, 3 months, 6 months. 9 months, 12 months)
  • Psychological IPV assessment (Baseline, 3 months, 6 months. 9 months, 12 months)
  • Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms (Baseline, 3 months, 6 months. 9 months, 12 months)
Sponsor
Boston University · other
With: Office of Crime Victims Advocacy - Washington State Department of Commerce
Contacts & investigators
ContactCasey Taft, PhD · contact · taft@bu.edu · 857-214-0986
ContactMegan Kopitsky, BS · contact · megan.kopitsky@va.gov
InvestigatorCasey Taft, PhD · principal_investigator, BU School of Medicine and National Center for PTSD
All locations (1)
BU Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, PsychiatryRecruiting
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Evaluating Interventions for Intimate Partner Violence Use in Washington State · TrialPath