Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Partnership to Develop and Pilot-Test a Peer Program to Reduce Depressive Symptoms in Men With Physical Disabilities
This project is intended to develop an evidence-based peer group counseling program that addresses depressive symptoms in men with physical disabilities. Expanding treatment options for depressive symptoms in men with physical disabilities will improve their access to care. The benefits of men with physical disabilities receiving effective treatment for depressive symptoms include better health, independent living, and longer life.
Previously the investigators developed, tested and disseminated a highly effective peer
counseling program to reduce depressive symptoms in women with physical disabilities (WPDs)
in partnership with Oregon Centers for Independent Living (CILs). WPDs with baseline Center
for Epidemiologic Depression (CES-D) scores >16 demonstrated significant improvement in
depressive symptoms that were sustained over a three month follow-up period (ES partial
eta2=.10). The program is offered by two peers in 14 weekly 2.5 hour group sessions. Our
academic-disability community partnership created Healing Pathways using community-based
participatory research (CBPR) methods and the investigators have sustained our partnership
over 9 years. Healing Pathways is currently publicly funded and offered by four of the seven
CILs in Oregon. The success of Healing Pathways is a direct result of community investment in
and ownership of the program. This project intends to replicate this model to address
depression in men with physical disabilities (MPDs).
Depression is a common secondary condition in MPDs, occurring at rates between 37-64%.This is
2-6 times the rate of depression found in non-disabled men. MPDs who work in CILs or other
consumer-controlled non-profit agencies are uniquely situated to address depression in their
peer group. The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 mandated the formation of CILs to maximize the
leadership, empowerment, independence, and productivity of people with disabilities and to
integrate them into mainstream society by providing four core independent living services.
The core services are: information and referral, independent living skills training, peer
counseling, and individual and systems advocacy. CILs are grounded in Independent Living (IL)
philosophy, promulgating inclusion across disability-types, de-medicalization and
de-institutionalization, and the belief that people with disabilities are the best experts on
their own health. There are 403 CILs across the nation, a largely untapped infrastructure
with great potential to augment health services for people with disabilities using a
peer-to-peer model. The sweeping nature of mental health reforms occurring in the span of a
lifetime has given rise to consumer-run peer programs and there is mounting evidence,
including randomized controlled trials, that they are efficacious in improving well-being and
psychiatric symptoms. Many persons with chronic mental illness prefer peer programs, finding
them more relatable and empowering than traditional services. Although many MPDs may also
prefer the option of peer counseling compared to traditional psychotherapy, to our knowledge
there are no peer programs that address the co-occurrence of physical disability and
depression in men. The long-term goal of this program of research is to improve mental health
outcomes in people with physical disabilities by partnering with members of this community.
This approach recognizes disability communities as cultural entities, respects the values of
IL philosophy, and emphasizes the interconnection between mental and physical health. The
objective here, the investigators' next step in pursuit of that goal, is to develop and
pilot-test a peer program for MPDs with depression. Using a community-engaged, exploratory
sequential, mixed methods design, this study intends to achieve the following three specific
aims:
1. Adapt the Healing Pathways program to meet the needs of MPDs with depressive symptoms.
2. Conduct a pilot study to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the peer program.
3. Estimate the effect size of the peer program for depressive symptoms. The outcomes of
this study will collectively inform the development of a future randomized controlled
trial of a program designed to treat depressive symptoms in MPDs. Further, the proposed
study addresses several public health goals including Healthy People 2020 goal DH18 to
reduce the proportion of people with disabilities who report serious emotional
distress,24 and the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health goals 1-3, to
understand that mental health is essential to overall health, promote mental health
treatments that are consumer-driven, and eliminate disparities in mental health care.
Because bias against people with disabilities is common among health care providers,
education of future health researchers is also necessary to help meet these goals. As
part of the proposed project, nursing students will received a mentored experience to
support culturally appropriate research with members of the disability community.
Experiences will include didactic instruction, community immersion, and research
training. Development of a cadre of future researchers who have the knowledge,
abilities, and skills to advance the health of people with disabilities through
community partnerships is a goal of the project.
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