Psychosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Smartphone Applications For Use in Youth With Early Psychosis in Community Outpatient Settings
The project aims to test the utility of implementing a mobile health application ("mhealth app") in early psychosis care in the community outpatient setting and in the university medical center setting. We will enroll 60 individuals in the early stages of psychotic illness who are receiving care in two UC Davis affiliated community based early psychosis outpatient programs: the Aldea Child and Family Services SOAR Programs in Napa and Solano Counties (Napa SOAR, and Solano SOAR), as well as the UC Davis Early Psychosis Programs (EDAPT and SacEDAPT clinics). Early psychosis (EP) participants will include individuals at high risk for developing a psychotic illness (termed "clinical high risk" or CHR) and individuals within two years of their first psychotic episode (termed "first episode psychosis" or FEP). Over the course of five months, EP participants will use the app on their mobile device to complete daily surveys assessing mood, social interactions and medication adherence, and weekly surveys assessing clinical symptoms, sleep and medication adherence. EP participants will also complete clinical assessments with UC Davis research staff at the initial and final study appointments (baseline and five month timepoints). Clinicians working in the three early psychosis programs will also participate in the study. In their clinical role, they will interact with EP participants' app data via the Dashboard, a secure web-based portal, and provide feedback on the clinical utility of the data that is provided on the dashboard. EP participants and their clinicians will also provide feedback on the impact of the app on the therapeutic relationship.
Although remission of psychotic symptoms following a patient's first episode of psychosis is
achievable through pharmacological and psychosocial treatment, 50% of patients relapse within
two years; 80% relapse within five. Relapse, defined as a recurrence of positive psychotic
symptoms, is associated with cumulative increases in levels of psychotic symptoms following
recovery, decreased social and community functioning, decreased quality of life, and
increased hospitalizations. Given the negative impact on patients and their families, and the
increasing cost of services as a function of relapse, development of effective relapse
prevention strategies is imperative. Predictors of relapse amenable to treatment include: 1)
clinical factors such as an exacerbation of clinical symptoms indicative of impending
relapse; 2) treatment engagement factors such as medication adherence and therapeutic
alliance; and 3) functioning factors such social impairments. Using mobile health technology
in a community based outpatient clinic, we propose to specifically address these three types
of relapse predictor variables.
The mobile health application tested in this study provides a user interface and a provider
interface. The user interface is the mobile application (i.e. the "app") that patients
interact with via their smartphone. This is designed to be simple and easily accessible. The
app gathers "active" data, i.e. self-report surveys, which the user is alerted to via
notifications on their device. Active data are analyzed and summarized for each patient on
the "Dashboard", a provider-facing web portal for accessing concise and relevant information
about a patient. The Dashboard provides up-to-date information regarding a patient's survey
responses. Providers then use this information to better inform treatment decisions.
Specific aims and associated hypotheses are as follows:
Aim 1: Determine the feasibility and acceptability of the mhealth app in a community based
outpatient early psychosis population. Hypothesis a: EPs will show high utilization of the
mhealth app and low dropout, as well as high satisfaction and endorsement of continued use of
the app. Hypothesis b: Clinicians will report high satisfaction and endorsement of continued
use of the app.
Aim 2: Identify mhealth data related to key patient outcomes to inform calibration of patient
status alerts. Hypothesis: Reductions in phone calls/text messages and/or increases in
self-reported ratings of basic symptoms will predict psychotic symptom flares, increased
clinic utilization, psychiatric ER visits and hospitalizations.
Aim 3: Evaluate the effect of the mhealth app on medication adherence, therapeutic alliance,
and insight. Hypothesis a: After five months of app use, patients will report improved
medication adherence, therapeutic alliance with their clinicians, and insight into their
illness. Hypothesis b: After five months of use, clinicians will report improved therapeutic
alliance with their patients.
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