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Clinical Trial Summary

Roughly 40% of those with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) have mental health needs, which is twice the national average. Nevertheless, there is dearth of evidenced-based mental health treatment for youth and young adults with IDD. The disparity in access to mental health care places those with IDD at greater risk of crisis service use. While telemental health studies demonstrate potential to enhance access to care, little of this research includes those with IDD, or crisis prevention and intervention. This project will refine and evaluate telemental health services for youth and young adults with IDD delivered within START (Systemic, Therapeutic, Assessment, Resources, and Treatment), a national, evidence-based model of crisis prevention and intervention for people with IDD. The study will begin with stakeholder feedback (service recipients, families, and providers) regarding telemental health services (Aim 1). Results will be used to refine the intervention. Our team will then compare telemental health versus in-person START services in a randomized control trial (Aim 2). To our knowledge, this will be the first trial of a telemental health crisis program for the IDD population. The final goal is to understand if outcomes vary across subpopulations (Aim 3) and to identify potential disparities. If found, the investigators will work with service users, families and providers to develop a strategy to address identified disparities in outcomes. The study will be executed by an interdisciplinary team of experts engaged with stakeholder partners. Understanding the benefits of specific telemental health methods has important implications to the design of interventions, within and outside of START. This telemental health study offers promise to address disparities in access to mental health care for people with IDD.


Clinical Trial Description

Aim 1: Refine START (Systemic, Therapeutic, Assessment, Resources, and Treatment) telemental health practices to meet the needs of persons with IDD and mental health needs, their family caregivers, and providers. The primary goal of Aim 1 is to identify strengths and weaknesses of telemental health START practices to inform the patient-centered intervention protocols used in Aim 2. The investigators hypothesize that our engagement approach and the qualitative methods used to design the telemental protocols will result in telemental health services that are accessible, acceptable, and inclusive in response to the diverse community of people with IDD-MH and their families. The secondary goal of Aim 1 is to design the Person Experiences Interview Survey (PEIS), adapted from the gold-standard Family Experiences Interview Schedule (FEIS). The investigators hypothesize that our engagement approach and the qualitative methods used to design the Person Experiences Interview Survey (PEIS) will result in a self-report tool with content validity for youth and young adults with IDD and mental health service experiences as indicated by the relevance, comprehensiveness, and ease of understanding. Aim 2: Compare the effectiveness of in-person START practices versus START telemental health using a randomized control design. It is hypothesized that telemental health START will not be inferior to in-person START in the reduction of emergency psychiatric service use, time-to-discharge, and improvement in mental health stability and perceived quality of care. This finding will support the use of telemental health practices as a valuable alternative to in-person care. Aim 3: Evaluate heterogeneity of treatment response by assessing differences in outcomes (emergency service diversion, perceived quality of care, and mental health stability) across diverse groups (e.g., race, ethnicity, language spoken, rural settings, level of intellectual disability). It is hypothesized that study outcomes (emergency service use, quality of care, and mental health stability) will not be inferior for the telemental health condition compared to the in- person condition within or across diverse groups, except for those living in rural settings. The investigators hypothesize improved outcomes will be found among those in the telemental health condition who live in a rural setting, compared to those living in a rural setting who are in the in-person condition, given the known difficulty in accessing in-person services for those living far from care. This finding will support equitable effects of telemental health START practices among diverse racial/ethnic and developmental groups, with potential added value for those living in rural settings. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05336955
Study type Interventional
Source University of New Hampshire
Contact Joan B Beasley, PhD
Phone 866-807-0987
Email start.telehealthstudy@unh.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 1, 2023
Completion date November 1, 2026

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