Psychological Distress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Behavioral Intervention to Reduce Psychological Distress Symptoms Among Black Gender Minority Women Experiencing Chronic Stigma
The research objectives of this study are to first, develop a culturally informed community-based intervention with guidance from community members (via focus groups and theater testing) to reduce the effect of chronic stigma exposure on psychological distress symptoms (PTS and depressive symptoms) among transgender women. Second, the research team will conduct a proof-of-concept trial to determine the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the resulting intervention.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 40 |
Est. completion date | December 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 18 Years to 99 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - 18 years or older - gender is woman/transgender feminine/female - assigned male sex at birth - speak/read English Exclusion Criteria: - Enrolled in mental health treatment or a controlled consequential environment (e.g. mental health transitional living environment) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Emory University School of Nursing | Atlanta | Georgia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Emory University | National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Changes in the transgender community connection scale (TCC) | Participants will answer questions about community connectedness. Response options: 5-point scale from strongly disagree to strongly agree. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the multidimensional scale of perceived social support (MSPSS) | Participants will answer 12 items about their feelings regarding certain statements. Options range from 1-Very strongly disagree to 7-very strongly agree. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the coping strategies inventory short form (CSI-SF) | Questions ask to categorize the degree of avoidant and approach coping behaviors used. 5-point Likert | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the coping self-efficacy scale (CSE) | Participants will be asked about their confidence or certainty that they can do 26 questions. Cannot do all=0 1,2,3,4,5=Moderately certain can do 6,7,8,9,10=at certain can do | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the self-efficacy to manage chronic disease scale (SECMCD) | Several questions will be asked about experiences related to "who the participant is". These questions include both how the participant describes herself and how others might describe them. There is no specific score for this instrument. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in sleep | Sleep will be measured using the Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). The PSQI is a self-rated questionnaire that assesses subjective sleep quality over the previous month. Responses yield seven component scores: subjective sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency, and other sleep related issues. The sum of the seven component scores yields a global sleep quality score. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the quality of life | The quality of life will be measured using the health-related quality of life questionnaire (HRQOL) to assess general and recent days of physical health, mental health, and activity limitation in the past month. Unhealthy days are an estimate of the overall number of days during the previous 30 days when the respondent felt that either his or her physical or mental health was not good. To obtain this estimate, responses to questions 2 and 3 are combined to calculate a summary index of overall unhealthy days, with a logical maximum of 30 unhealthy days. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Other | Changes in the disability/social functioning scale | The disability/social functioning scale will be measured using the behavior and symptom identification scale (BASIS-24) | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Primary | Intervention Retention Rate | number screened per month; number enrolled per month and per source; rate of eligibility =40%); (=50% retention rate; reasons for dropouts; acute crisis or avoidance behaviors; incentive structure); | Throughout the intervention (up to 12 weeks) | |
Primary | Average time delay from screening to enrollment and average time to enroll enough participants to form cohorts | The average time it takes for participants to be screened and complete enrollment depending on the study cohorts | From screening to Baseline | |
Primary | Overall attendance/adherence | Session attendance =67%; online engagement with educational material via click counts | 2 weeks post-intervention | |
Primary | Changes in the intervention fidelity | Fidelity rates within and between interventionists; range from 0-3, with 2 or higher indicative of high fidelity per domain via the Seeking Safety Adherence Scale (SASS). Tailoring of the SASS will be based on the format used to deliver the intervention content and the focus of the content. For example, the original scale has the following items that may not be appropriate for the created intervention: "Focused on how the topic related to substance use; Gave handouts and made use of them during the session." Thus, these items may be removed or modified to align with content delivery and subject matter. The SASS will be used to periodically assess the fidelity of intervention delivery among each interventionist. Mean scores will be compared between interventionists and scores below 80% will require remediation in the form of individual training with the PI and the interventionist. | Throughout the intervention (up to 12 weeks) | |
Primary | Changes in the proportion of acceptability | assessment acceptability will be assessed by calculating the proportion of planned assessments that are completed and satisfaction ratings =75%; duration of assessment visits; reasons for dropouts); | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Primary | Changes in the Intervention acceptability | intervention acceptability (acceptability =75%; qualitative assessments; reasons for dropouts; preference/satisfaction ratings =75% via Client satisfaction questionnaire); Client satisfaction questionnaire (CSQ-8; Cronbach's alpha .93; 8-item; 4-point Likert) will be administered at the end of every intervention session to address individual session utility and at T3 for overall satisfaction | Throughout the intervention (up to 2 weeks post-intervention) | |
Primary | Accessibility of the intervention | intervention accessibility (qualitative assessments; reasons for dropouts and adherence; technological literacy; ability to access reliable internet). There is no scale for this instrument. | Throughout the intervention (up to 2 weeks post-intervention) | |
Secondary | Change in PTSD symptoms | Psychological distress symptom severity will be measured using the PCL-5 which is a 20-item self-report measure that assesses the 20 DSM-5 symptoms of PTSD. The PCL-5 has a variety of purposes, including monitoring symptoms, and changes during and after treatment, screening individuals for PTSD, and making a provisional PTSD diagnosis. Evidence for the PCL for the diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)-IV suggests that a 5-10-point change represents reliable change (i.e., change not due to chance) and a 10-20-point change represents a clinically significant change. Therefore, it was recommended to use 5 points as a minimum threshold for determining whether the improvements are clinically meaningful using the PCL for DSM-IV. | Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment) , 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention | |
Secondary | Change in Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II) | The BDI-II consists of 21 items assessing symptoms of depression experienced during the past 2 weeks. Each item contains four statements reflecting varying degrees of symptom severity. Respondents are instructed to circle the number (ranging from zero to three, indicating increasing severity) that corresponds with the statement that best describes them. Ratings are summed to calculate a total BDI-II score, which can range from 0 to 63. (BDI-II total score, alpha-0.90; cognitive factor, alpha .81; Somatic factor, alpha .87)
Scoring the Beck Depression Inventory: Low (1-10)-Normal ups and downs; (11-16)-Mild mood disturbance Mild mood disturbance (17-20) Borderline clinical depression; (21-30)=Moderate depression Significant (31-40)-Severe depression; over 40-extreme depression |
Baseline, Mid-intervention (3-6 weeks from baseline assessment), 2 weeks post intervention, 3 months post-intervention |
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