Mental Illness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enhancing Mental Health Care by Scientifically Matching Patients to Providers' Strengths
Verified date | May 2020 |
Source | University of Massachusetts, Amherst |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Research has shown that mental health care (MHC) providers differ significantly in their
ability to help patients. In addition, providers demonstrate different patterns of
effectiveness across symptom and functioning domains. For example, some providers are
reliably effective in treating numerous patients and problem domains, others are reliably
effective in some domains (e.g., depression, substance abuse) yet appear to struggle in
others (e.g., anxiety, social functioning), and some are reliably ineffective, or even
harmful, across patients and domains. Knowledge of these provider differences is based
largely on patient-reported outcomes collected in routine MHC settings.
Unfortunately, provider performance information is not systematically used to refer or assign
a particular patient to a scientifically based best-matched provider. MHC systems continue to
rely on random or purely pragmatic case assignment and referral, which significantly "waters
down" the odds of a patient being assigned/referred to a high performing provider in the
patient's area(s) of need, and increases the risk of being assigned/referred to a provider
who may have a track record of ineffectiveness. This research aims to solve the existing
non-patient-centered provider-matching problem.
Specifically, the investigators aim to demonstrate the comparative effectiveness of a
scientifically-based patient-provider match system compared to status quo pragmatic case
assignment. The investigators expect in the scientific match group significantly better
treatment outcomes (e.g., symptoms, quality of life) and higher patient satisfaction with
treatment. The investigators also expect to demonstrate feasibility of implementing a
scientific match process in a community MHC system and broad dissemination of the easily
replicated scientific match technology in diverse health care settings. The importance of
this work for patients cannot be understated. Far too many patients struggle to find the
right provider, which unnecessarily prolongs suffering and promotes health care system
inefficiency. A scientific match system based on routine outcome data uses patient-generated
information to direct this patient to this provider in this setting. In addition, when based
on multidimensional assessment, it allows a wide variety of patient-centered outcomes to be
represented (e.g., symptom domains, functioning domains, quality of life).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 288 |
Est. completion date | March 15, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | September 23, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion: - Being 18-70 years of age - Being the primary, informed decision-maker for one's care - Willingness to be randomized to condition and to complete a few study-specific measures Exclusion: - Being under 18 or over 70 years of age - Not being responsible for one's own treatment decisions - Unwillingness to be randomized to condition and/or to complete a few study-specific measures |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Massachusetts Amherst | Amherst | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Massachusetts, Amherst | Outcome Referrals, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Psychological and Behavioral Consultants, University at Albany |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Average Z-Scores for the Treatment Outcome Package-Clinical Scales (TOP-CS; Kraus, Seligman, & Jordan, 2005) | The TOP-Clinical Scales consist of 58 items assessing 12 symptom and functional domains (risk-adjusted for case mix variables assessed via 37 items on the companion TOP-Case Mix form, such as divorce, job loss, comorbidity): work functioning, sexual functioning, social conflict, depression, panic/somatic anxiety, psychosis, suicidal ideation, violence, mania, sleep, substance abuse, and quality of life. Global symptom severity was assessed by averaging the z-scores (i.e., standard deviation units relative to the general population mean) across the 12 clinical scales. Higher scores indicate greater impairment. Given that we examined change over the entire treatment period for this outcome (in a longitudinal hierarchical linear model), we provide the average mean and standard deviation for the TOP-CS z-scores across all measurement occasions. | Baseline and biweekly across 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Symptom Checklist-10 (SCL-10; Rosen, Drescher, Moos, & Gusman, 1999) Total Score | Global psychological distress was assessed with the Symptom Checklist-10 (SCL-10; Rosen, Drescher, Moos, & Gusman, 1999), a 10-item, well validated and widely used self-report inventory that assesses psychological well-being. Total scores can range from 0 to 40, with higher scores indicating greater distress. Given that we examined change over the entire treatment period for this outcome (in a longitudinal hierarchical linear model), we provide the average mean and standard deviation for the SCL-10 total score across all measurement occasions. | Baseline and biweekly across 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Working Alliance Inventory—Short Form, Patient Version (WAI-SF-P; Tracey, & Kokotovic, 1989) Total Score | The WAI is the most widely used alliance measure, assessing patient-therapist agreement on the goals and tasks of treatment, and the quality of their relational bond. This 12-item short form assesses these dimensions from the patient's perspective, with higher scores indicating a more positive relationship (theoretical range = 12 to 84). Given that we examined change over the entire treatment period for this outcome (in a longitudinal hierarchical linear model), we provide the average mean and standard deviation for the WAI total score across all measurement occasions. | Biweekly across 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Outcome Expectation (OE) Subscale of the Credibility/Expectancy Scale (CEQ; Devilly, & Borkovec, 2000) | The OE subscale of the CEQ is the most widely used and psychometrically sound measure of patients' expectations for the personal efficacy of treatment. The three OE items range from 1-9 or 0-100% (in 10 percentage point increments), with higher ratings indicating greater expectation for improvement. Given that the OE CEQ items are assessed on different scales, we re-scaled the items to the same metric before creating a total score (theoretical range = 3 to 27). Given that we examined change over the entire treatment period for this outcome (in a longitudinal hierarchical linear model), we provide the average mean and standard deviation for the OE subscale across all measurement occasions. | Biweekly across 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Domain-Specific Impairment on the Most Elevated Domain of the Treatment Outcome Package-Clinical Scales (TOP-CS) | The TOP-CS consists of 58 items assessing 12 symptom and functional domains (risk-adjusted for case mix variables assessed via 37 items on the companion TOP-Case Mix form, such as divorce, job loss, comorbidity): work functioning, sexual functioning, social conflict, depression, panic/somatic anxiety, psychosis, suicidal ideation, violence, mania, sleep, substance abuse, and quality of life. Domain-specific impairment reflects each patient's scores on their most elevated problem domain (i.e., the domain most elevated at baseline). These scores were standardized z-scores (i.e., standard deviation units relative to the general population mean), with higher scores indicating greater impairment. Given that we examined change over the treatment period for this outcome (hierarchical linear model), we provide the average mean and standard deviation for the most elevated TOP domain across all measurement occasions. Note that this measure was positively skewed so we log-transformed it. | Baseline and biweekly across 16 weeks | |
Secondary | Early Treatment Discontinuation (i.e., Attending 2 or Fewer Treatment Sessions) | Early treatment discontinuation was operationalized as a patient discontinuing treatment after 2 or fewer sessions, whereas early continuation was operationalized as attending 3 or more treatment sessions. For analyses, early treatment discontinuation was coded 1 and early continuation was coded 0. | Early treatment discontinuation/continuation at session 2 | |
Secondary | Overall Provider Quality Subscale of the Treatment Outcome Package (TOP) Satisfaction Scale | The Overall Provider Quality subscale of the TOP Satisfaction Scale assesses the extent to which patients are satisfied with their mental health care provider. This subscale reflects the average of 4 items, with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction (theoretical range = 1 to 6). | Assessed after 16 weeks of treatment or at the point of naturalistic treatment termination, whichever comes sooner |
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