Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Collaborative Child Mental Healthcare in Low-Resource Settings
Background: Mental health problems cause a disproportionate burden of disability among
children and youth compared to adults. Primary care plays an important role in efforts to
prevent and intervene early in the course of child and adolescent mental health problems.
While research with adults has shown the feasibility of integrating mental health care into
primary care settings, there have been few studies among children and youth. Evidence remains
lacking that integration is feasible in diverse settings, that it improves outcomes, and that
methods can be developed to address the mixed symptoms of emerging child/youth problems and
their overlap with developmental and parental disorders.
Goals: The purpose of this project is to test the effectiveness of adding a child/youth
mental health component into an existing collaborative care program for adult mental health
problems. The work will refine a framework for efficient cultural adaption and tailoring of
an existing child/youth primary care mental health intervention and then test whether the
tailored intervention results in improved child and parent outcomes. The work will also
provide evidence about the mechanisms by which those outcomes are achieved and what factors
influence uptake of the child/youth component by general practitioners (GPs). These results
should be generalizable to low and middle income countries and to underserved areas of the US
where there are minimal child mental health resources and family physicians provide the bulk
of medical care for children and youth.
Methods: The planned work involves the adaptation/tailoring process followed by a trial with
45 GPs already engaged in collaborative care for adults; the trial will study adding
collaborative care for children ages 5-15. GPs will be randomly assigned in groups to begin
6-month control periods involving child mental health screening and referral. They will then
receive child/youth training and begin second 6-month periods of screening plus ongoing
coaching and booster sessions and collaborative management. Primary outcomes will be measured
by recruiting and following for 6 months two cohorts of children/youth and their parents (one
control, one collaborative care). Data collected from GPs, parents, youth, and the
collaborative care data system will allow measurement of key factors that determine the
program's success in helping children and families.
Most mental health problems begin in childhood and adolescence, but delays in receipt of
treatment are measured in years to decades. As a result, mental health problems cause a
disproportionate burden of disability among children and youth compared to adults, and have a
major impact on life course development. Primary care services can play an important role in
efforts to prevent and intervene early in the course of child and adolescent mental health
problems. Primary care services are widely available and offer an opportunity to interact
simultaneously with children and their parents, treat mental health in the context of medical
and developmental concerns, and reduce the stigma associated with visiting identifiable
mental health facilities. While research with adults has shown the feasibility of integrating
mental health care into primary care settings, and that it reduces the burden of mental
illnesses, there have been few studies among children and youth and none that address a
combined task-shifting/stepped care model. In addition, evidence remains lacking that
integration is feasible in diverse settings, that it improves clinical outcomes, and has the
potential to be scaled up.
One essential element of integration is "shifting" first-line mental health engagement and
treatment tasks to primary care providers. Task shifting requires mental health interventions
that fit both the local context of primary care services and the local nature of the problems
seen. To date, most adult and child integration models have targeted single conditions at
diagnostic levels and relied on additional co-located personnel to provide treatment. To
achieve goals of prevention and early intervention, integration models for children and youth
must take into account that the symptoms of emerging child and youth problems often suggest
multiple possible disorders and can be co-morbid with developmental and parental disorders.
By definition, emerging problems amenable to early intervention are likely to be
"subthreshold" and not qualify for treatment in a specialty setting, especially when
resources are scarce, even though early intervention holds the promise of preventing
progression.
The purpose of this trial is to test the effectiveness of adding a child/youth mental health
component - tailored to fit the context of primary care into an existing collaborative care
program supporting primary care management of adult mental health problems.
The trial's specific aims are to conduct an early-stage hybrid effectiveness-implementation
trial with 45 general practitioners in two cities focusing on:
1. Whether delivery of tailored interventions by primary care providers results in improved
child and parent mental health outcomes; and exploring the mechanisms by which the
interventions achieve those outcomes (which conditions are more likely to be identified
and treated, which treatments have the greatest uptake by parents and youth)
2. Whether a coordinated program of training, ongoing coaching, and collaborative care
results in uptake of the tailored intervention by primary care providers as evidenced by
treatment provided in primary care and participation in collaborative care through
consultation and referral.
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