Mental Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Researching the Effectiveness of a Decision-Support Tool for Adult Consumers With Mental Health Needs and Their Care Managers
The primary goal of the proposed study is to investigate the implementation and effectiveness of the mPOWR (Moving Patient-centered Outcomes through Wellness and Recovery) in diverse urban and rural community mental health settings. The study compares patient participation and outcomes using the mPOWR system to a usual care control condition. Four community mental health agencies participate in the research: two in San Francisco (urban) and two in N.M. (rural). One site in each setting serves as the mPOWR implementation site and the other serves as the control site. Service sites were randomly assigned to intervention or usual care conditions. A quasi experimental design was used; only eligible participants were enrolled in the study (e.g., exclusion criteria of moderate to severe cognitive impairment, patient services structured for provision of mPOWR implementation, etc.). The study design will employ repeated quantitative measures to assess change in outcomes within and across conditions over time. Qualitative methods in the form of focus group interviews will also be used to round out the information obtained about patient and provider expectations and experiences. Primary outcomes of interest include: Short Form Health Survey-12 (SF-12; physical and mental health aspects of health and well-being); Outcome Rating Scale (ORS; general well-being, personal well-being, close relationships, and work/school/friend relationships); Shared Decision Making Questionnaire (congruence of patient's and provider's participation in therapeutic decision making and patient's understanding of treatment and treatment options); Working Alliance Inventory (perception of therapeutic alliance); and Satisfaction Questionnaire (communication patterns between physicians and their patients).
Research on the impact of decision-support tools for providers and patients has not included
frontline care managers within community mental health settings. In particular, the care
management field lacks effective models for integrating results-based and patient-centered
care into routine practice with diverse adults with complex mental health and social service
needs. For over five years, Family Service Agency of San Francisco (FSA) developed and
piloted a mental health decision-support tool entitled the Assessment Diagnostic Evaluation
and Planning Tool (ADEPT) for use by patients and front-line providers. The ADEPT was
developed by a team of researchers, frontline providers, and FSA patients to collect data
and track patient progress over time. Yet, its strong focus on diagnostic screening and
excessive length limited its relevance to patients in guiding service decisions. Over the
past two years, a team of FSA patients and care managers revised the tool, eliminating its
diagnostic component and retaining two measures of quality of life and community living
skills that were reviewed and/or adapted by patients to reflect meaningful outcomes in the
delivery of services. Decision aids and a communications toolkit were also developed to
support the use of shared-decision making (SDM) processes in the provision of services.
Together, these instruments and tools make up the Moving Patient Outcomes toward Wellness
and Recovery (mPOWR) system. mPOWR ensures that the patient-provider relationship remains
focused on patient identified outcomes and use of SDM throughout care. The primary goal of
the study is to investigate the implementation and effectiveness of the mPOWR in diverse
urban and rural community mental health settings.
FSA has partnered with senior faculty from the University of New Mexico to serve as
independent researchers for this study. The study involves four community mental health
agencies: two in San Francisco (urban) and two in N.M. (rural). One (randomly chosen) site
in each setting serves as the mPOWR implementation site and the other serves as the control
site. The study population initially enrolled included 240 (60/site X 4 sites) diverse
adults with chronic mental health conditions. The specific aims for this study are: (1) To
improve patient and provider participation in shared-decision making and engagement in
mental health treatment, to improve [patient] personal Quality of Life, and to improve
[patient] access to community/social services; (2) To increase patient understanding of
their treatment and of treatment options; to increase their personal treatment progress; (3)
To increase patient functionality and sense of perceived support for their therapeutic
outcomes.
Primary outcomes of interest include: Short Form Health Survey-12 (SF-12; physical and
mental health aspects of health and well-being); Outcome Rating Scale (ORS; general
well-being, personal well-being, close relationships, and work/school/friend relationships);
Shared Decision Making Questionnaire (congruence of patient's and provider's participation
in therapeutic decision making and patient's understanding of treatment and treatment
options); Working Alliance Inventory (perception of therapeutic alliance); and Satisfaction
Questionnaire (communication patterns between physicians and their patients). Qualitative
methods in the form of focus group interviews will also be used to round out the information
obtained about patient and provider expectations and experiences. Data will be collected in
a time series design.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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