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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05784818
Other study ID # 90IFRE0056-01-00
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date March 7, 2022
Est. completion date March 30, 2024

Study information

Verified date August 2022
Source University of South Florida
Contact Kristin Kosyluk, PhD
Phone 813-974-6019
Email kkosyluk@usf.edu
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This is a three-lesson, disclosure-based stigma reduction program meant to reduce barriers to community living and participation for college students with psychiatric disabilities. The goal is to improve community living and participation of individuals with psychiatric disabilities within their postsecondary community using the Honest Open Proud (HOP) program. There are 3 specific objectives of the project:1) evaluate program fidelity, 2) assess program feasibility, and 3) conduct a randomized controlled trial of the HOP program with college students with mental illness to examine its efficacy. Anticipated outcomes include increases in 1) community integration, 2)self-esteem and self-efficacy, 3) empowerment and self-determination, 4) disclosure of mental illness in order to obtain needed support, and 5) care seeking/service engagement for mental illness. Ultimately, we expect to see increased academic persistence and achievement among HOP program completers.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 201
Est. completion date March 30, 2024
Est. primary completion date March 30, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - College students enrolled at USF - Over 18 years of age - Individuals with psychiatric disability(ies) who feel shame regarding their mental illness or keep it secret Exclusion Criteria: - Individuals with a sole substance abuse disorder - Individuals who plan to graduate before the conclusion of the data collection period; for intervention participants, this would be a graduation date within 6 months of starting the intervention.

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Up To Me Intervention + No Booster
Participants will complete two-hour sessions once a week over three weeks in which they complete modules in the Up To Me Workbook. These sessions are facilitated by a peer facilitator and a member of the USF Counseling center. Other members in the group sessions are university students who are peers who are also experiencing some form of shame around their mental health challenges.
Up To Me Intervention + Booster
In addition to the Up To Me Intervention, participants also complete a booster/additional session where additional topics of the Up To Me workbook are covered. This additional session occurs four weeks after the completion of the third session.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of South Florida Tampa Florida

Sponsors (4)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of South Florida Illinois Institute of Technology, National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research, Temple University

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (10)

Bean, J. P. (1980). Dropouts and turnover: The synthesis and test of a causal model of student attrition. Research in higher education, 12(2), 155-187.

Bers, T. H., & Smith, K. E. (1991). Persistence of community college students: The influence of student intent and academic and social integration. Research in higher Education, 32(5), 539-556.

Gonyea, R.M., Kish, K.A., Kuh, G.D., Muthiah, R.N., & Thomas, A.D. (2003). College Student Experiences Questionnaire: Norms for the Fourth Edition. Bloomington: Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research, Policy, and Planning.

Hurtado, S., & Carter, D. F. (1997). Effects of college transition and perceptions of the campus racial climate on Latino college students' sense of belonging. Sociology of education, 324-345.

Jones, N., Brown, R., Keys, C. B., & Salzer, M. (2015). Beyond symptoms? Investigating predictors of sense of campus belonging among postsecondary students with psychiatric disabilities. Journal of Community Psychology, 43(5), 594-610. https://doi.org/10.1002/jcop.21704

Milem, J. F., & Berger, J. B. (1997). A modified model of college student persistence: Exploring the relationship between Astin's theory of involvement and Tinto's theory of student departure. Journal of college student development, 38(4), 387.

Pascarella, E. T., & Terenzini, P. T. (2005). How college affects students: A third decade of research (Vol. 2).

Rickwood DJ, Braithwaite VA. Social-psychological factors affecting help-seeking for emotional problems. Soc Sci Med. 1994 Aug;39(4):563-72. doi: 10.1016/0277-9536(94)90099-x. — View Citation

Rickwood, D., Deane, F. P., Wilson, C. J., & Ciarrochi, J. (2005). Young people's help- seeking for mental health problems. Advances in Mental Health, 4(3), 218-251.

Salzer MS. A comparative study of campus experiences of college students with mental illnesses versus a general college sample. J Am Coll Health. 2012;60(1):1-7. doi: 10.1080/07448481.2011.552537. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Self-Stigma of Mental Illness Scale-Short Form Scores correspond with the four stage regressive model of self-stigma. The min of this scale is 1 or "I strongly disagree" and the max is 9 or "I strongly agree". Using this scale, an observed decrease would be a better outcome. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Primary Stigma Stress Scale This scale includes 4 items measuring appraisal of stigma as a stressor (e.g., "prejudice against people with mental illness will have a negative impact on my future") and 4 items measuring perceived resources to cope with stigma (e.g., "I am prepared to deal with prejudice against people with mental illness"). The min on the scale is 1 or "Strongly disagree" to 7 or "Strongly agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Primary Why Try Stigma Scale (WTSS) The current version of the WTSS does not include items specific to the pursuit of postsecondary education. Therefore, the investigators will add two items for the purpose of this study: "I am not worthy of obtaining a college degree because I have a mental illness" and "I am not capable of obtaining a college degree because I have a mental illness." After the addition of the two aforementioned items, this scale includes 16 items on a seven-point agreement scale. The min on the scale is 1 or "Strongly disagree" to 7 or "Strongly agree". Using this scale, an observed decrease would be a better outcome. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Primary The Empowerment Scale Yields five factors: self-efficacy/self-esteem, power/powerlessness/community activism, righteous anger, and optimism/control over the future. This scale includes 28 items on a 4-point agreement scale. The min on the scale is 1 or "Strongly Disagree" to the max of 4 or "Strongly Agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Primary Self-Determination Scale Participants respond to a vignette about a person, Harry, living with schizophrenia. The scale includes 14 items on a 9-point agreement scale. The minimum on the scale is 1 or "Strongly Agree" to 9 or "Strongly Disagree". Using this scale, an observed decrease would be a better outcome. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary College Student Experiences Questionnaire (CSEQ Fourth Edition) Following the design of the study conducted by Salzer examining the postsecondary experiences of students with psychiatric disabilities, the investigators will administer several scales from the CSEQ. The CSEQ assesses student campus experiences and engagement, relationships with others on campus, and the degree of satisfaction with their experience at a particular institution.
Three indicators of academic integration will be included in this study. The first, Quality of Effort (QE), refers to the underlying assumption of the CSEQ: "The more effort students expend in using the resources and opportunities an institution provides for their learning and development, the more they benefit." This scale has 22 items on a 4-point frequency scale. The minimum on the scale is 1 or "Never" to the max (4) or "Very Often". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Peer Group Interactions Scale The Peer-Group Interactions Scale is a subscale of Pascarella and Terenzini's scale assessing the academic and social considerations in student persistence.
This scale has 7 items on a 7-point agreement scale. The min on the scale is 1 or "Strongly Disagree" to the max (7) or "Strongly Agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Interactions with Faculty Scale The Interactions with Faculty Scale is a subscale of Pascarella and Terenzini's scale assessing the academic and social considerations in student persistence; this scale focuses on assessing the quality of faculty interactions.
This scale has 5 items on a 7-point agreement scale. The min on the scale is 1 or "Strongly Disagree" to the max (7) or "Strongly Agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Sense of Campus Belonging Scale (SoCB) Sense of belonging is a psychological construct unique from engagement and integration, focusing on students' subjective feelings of connectedness. Hurtado and Carter developed a measure of cohesion including a subscale of sense of belonging including items concerning perceived "belonging," "fit," and being a "part" of the community.
Each of the three items on the SoCB scale is rated on an 11-point Likert scale with a min of 0 or "Strongly DIsagree to the max (10) "Strongly agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale (ATSPPHS) The Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale measures attitudes towards seeking help for mental health concerns from professional sources.
This scale has 10 items on a 4-point agreement scale with a min of 1 or "Disagree" to a max of 4 "Agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Actual Help Seeking Questionnaire The Actual Help Seeking Questionnaire (AHSQ) assesses recent help-seeking behavior and was adapted from Rickwood and Braithwaite. The AHSQ has been successfully used to measure help-seeking across different time contexts, sources of help, and types of problems. Recent help-seeking behavior is determined by listing a number of potential help sources and asking whether or not help has been sought from each of the sources during a specified period of time for a specified problem.
This questionnaire has 14 items that represent sources of help-seeking. Using this questionnaire, an observed increase in sources used would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Grade Point Average (GPA) GPA will be retrieved from University records at all measurement time points (baseline, post-test, and 1, 3, and 6- month follow-up). Students will be asked to sign a release form consenting that their GPA records be released to the study investigators. The investigators do realize GPA may lack sensitivity to change over time, however, the investigators include this variable as previous research in higher education has captured change over relatively short time periods (one to two years). Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Academic and Intellectual Development Scale The Academic and Intellectual Development Scale is a subscale of Pascarella and Terenzini's scale assessing the academic and social considerations in student persistence; it focuses on assessing satisfaction with the institution's academics.
This scale has 7 items on a 7-point agreement scale with a min of 1 or "Strongly Disagree" to a max of 7 or "Strongly Agree". Using this scale, an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Academic Persistence Data on student registration status will be retrieved from University records at all measurement time points. Data on actual persistence will be coded: 1= withdrawal, 2= persisted. The investigators will ask students to sign a release consenting that their enrollment records be released to the study investigators.
Intent to persist will be measured using a single item: "It is likely that I will re-enroll in the university next semester" (5= strongly agree, 1= strongly disagree). An observed increase would be a better outcome.
In order to capture persistence and achievement over the entire course of the project (after 6-month follow-up is complete, The investigators will continue to collect data from the University records at five-month intervals (approximately once every semester) until the end of the project period. The investigators will request consent from all students to access these records.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Counseling Center Assessment of Psychological Symptoms Collecting this data will allow us to control for symptom severity in our analyses. These measures were selected as they have strong psychometric properties and sensitivity to change, require minimal time to complete, and are also the assessments administered to all students receiving services at USF where the study will take place. Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Diagnostic and Status Questionnaire In addition to the Counseling Center tools, the investigators will provide the opportunity for participants to self-report diagnosis and disability. This tool was developed by the National Center for Science Education for patient self-report.
This questionnaire assesses impairment symptoms on a 7-point scale with a min of 1 or "Not at all impaired" to a max of 7 (Very much impaired). Using this scale, a low score would be a better outcome.
This measure will be collected at week 0 for all participants
Secondary Diagnostic and Status Questionnaire Past 4 weeks In addition to the Counseling Center tools, the investigators will provide the opportunity for participants to self-report diagnosis and disability. This tool was developed by the National Center for Science Education for patient self-report.
This questionnaire assesses impairment symptoms on a 7-point scale with a min of 1 or "Not at all impaired" to a max of 7 (Very much impaired). Using this scale, an observed decrease would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Behavioral Health Measure Collecting this data will allow us to control for symptom severity in our analyses. These measures were selected as they have strong psychometric properties and sensitivity to change, require minimal time to complete, and are also the assessments administered to all students receiving services at USF where the study will take place.
This measure has 20 items on a 5-point scale with a min 0 and a max of 5. For seven items, a score of 5 is a high and positive rating. For these items, an observed increase over time would be a better outcome. For the remaining items, a score of 5 is a high rating of distress and an observed decrease would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Recovery Assessment Scale The Recovery Assessment Scale (RAS) is a 24-item measure based on a process model of recovery, the RAS attempts to assess aspects of recovery with a special focus on hope and self-determination.
These items are measured on a 5-point agreement scale with a min of 1 or "strongly disagree" to a max of 5 or "strongly agree". Using this scale an observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Quality of Relationships Scale A 3-item scale that measures the quality of an individual's relationship with a specific person.
Items are measured on a 7-point rating scale with a min of 1 and max of 7. Where 1 is a low rating of the relationship quality and 7 is a high rating. An observed increase would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
Secondary Up To Me Satisfaction Scale This scale assesses participants' satisfaction with and feedback for the team regarding the primary intervention of the study. This measure is not being used to measure observed changes. The investigators are interested in the participants' satisfaction with the intervention.
This scale includes 6 items on a 7-point agreement scale with a min of 1 or "Highly Agree" and a max of 7 or "Highly Disagree".
This measure will be collected at week 7 if in the Up To Me Intervention + Booster or Up To Me Intervention + No Booster arms
Secondary Demographics Questionnaire Provides background information on participants regarding their identities and experiences. This questionnaire is not being used to measure observed changes but to describe the study sample. This measure will be collected at week 0 for all participants
Secondary Peer Support and Advocacy Items This scale was developed by the study investigators and is comprised of four items inquiring about the participant's involvement in organizations related to peer support or advocacy for mental illness.
An observed increase in involvement would be a better outcome.
Change from baseline to week 3, week 7, week 15 and 27 for all participants
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