Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention With Community Worker Support for Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence in Cali and Tuluá, Colombia.
Female survivors of domestic violence (DV) may exhibit various mental health problems. A
variety of psychotherapies are available to improve their mental health, however there is
uncertainty on which is the best. In Colombian, national guidelines do not mention which
therapy should be used and in practice, psychologists use their preferred approaches. Due to
the shortage of psychotherapy appointments, patients wait a long time to initiate treatment
and for each subsequent appointment. Furthermore, patients with mental health problems often
fail to attend their appointments and often drop-out of their psychotherapy. This study will
offer an alternative intervention that is hypothesized to be superior to normal patient care
in Colombia. It will be conducted in Cali and Tuluá, which have high levels of DV, internally
displaced conflict victims and large socioeconomic inequalities. Psychologists and trained
Lay Psychosocial Community Workers (LPCWs) will work together to provide a
cognitive-behavioral intervention (CBI) for female survivors of DV, which is a therapy that
aims to change the way people think and behave. Each woman will be offered 11 weekly sessions
which will be shared between a psychologist and a LPCW. The LPCW will assign tasks to the
patients which have been set by the psychologist and will assist participants to attend their
appointments. The study´s hypothesis is: 1) A psychologist led CBI with LPCW support is
superior to standard psychotherapy care in Colombian health services to improve mental health
symptoms of female survivors of DV.
Patients will be recruited from health services and will be randomly assigned to either the
standard psychotherapy or the CBI with LPCW support (intervention group). In the standard
psychotherapy group, patients will receive psychotherapy approximately every four weeks,
depending on demand, and will have as many sessions as they require. In the intervention
group, patients will be offered eleven weekly CBI sessions. Mental health questionnaires will
be used to measure the study participants' mental health symptoms, their functionality,
experience of DV and other forms of violence. In the intervention group, these questionnaires
will be applied before initiating psychotherapy, two weeks and six months after completing
their psychotherapy. Patients in the control group will have questionnaires applied before
commencing psychotherapy and fourteen weeks and twenty-two weeks after starting.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a complex problem because it is associated with factors at
a variety of levels which include the individual, conjugal, societal, cultural, and
institutional, which can all also act as barriers to accessing mental health services.
Survivors of IPV are vulnerable to an array of mental health illnesses which include
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, emotional dependency and low
self-esteem. A variety of psychotherapies are available to improve mental illnesses, however
there is uncertainty on which is the superior approach. In Colombia there are no national
guidelines outlining which therapy should be used, rather, psychologists use their preferred
approach or approaches which may include humanistic or psychoanalytical methods. Furthermore,
patients with mental health problems face a large waiting list for initial and follow-up
psychotherapy appointments, often fail to attend and do not complete their treatment. This
study will be conducted in two cities, Cali and Tuluá, in the state Valle del Cauca that have
high levels of IPV, internally displaced conflict victims and large socioeconomic
inequalities.
The study´s hypothesis is that a psychologist led cognitive-behavioral intervention with Lay
Psychosocial Community Worker (LPCW) support is superior to treatment as usual to reduce
mental illness symptoms. The study's objective is to improve mental illness symptoms of
female survivors of IPV through the program IPCCOS, a Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention with
Community Worker Support for Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence (IPCCOS is the
abbreviation for its name in Spanish: Intervención Psicoterapéutico Cognitivo-Conductual con
Apoyo Comunitario para Sobrevivientes de Violencia de Pareja). IPCCOS was developed by the
CISALVA Institute at the Universidad del Valle (Cali), the Universidad Central del Valle del
Cauca UCEVA (Tuluá), with assistance from Heartland Alliance International (HAI) to provide
and test an alternative intervention for female survivors of IPV. Each patient will be
offered 11 weekly psychotherapy sessions which will be divided between a psychologist and a
LPCW. The LPCWs in the study will come from community women groups who are already working in
women´s rights and have exposure to violence against women and the relevant medico-legal
systems. They will receive up to a week of intensive training from study psychologists and a
psychologist from HAI who is trained in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and has experience
training and supervising LPCWs in other mental health studies in Colombia. Approximately six
weeks after initiating the intervention, LPCWs will receive a further day of training. LPCWs
will assign tasks to patients which have been set by the psychologist and will assist them to
overcome any barriers to attend their appointments. They will be closely supervised by the
psychologist once per week to discuss their patients.
A randomized control trial study design will be used to compare and evaluate the two groups.
Patients will be recruited from health services if they are found to have experimented IPV in
the last year and will be randomly assigned by block randomization to either treatment as
usual or the IPCCOS (intervention group). Patients will be invited to participate in the
study from three sources:
- General physician outpatient appointments.
- Hospital data bases. Hospital records will be searched to detect patients that have
experienced IPV and that have not commenced psychotherapy. This will be performed
retrospectively to search for patients that were given this diagnosis of IPV between
January 2017 and September 2017. They will be contacted via phone, given a brief
description of the study and if they are interested in participating, they will be
invited to meet a health professional who will give a more detailed description of the
study and take informed consent.
- Patients that are detected to have experienced IPV in the Emergency Department will be
told about the study. They will only be asked to decide on their participation one week
after they have been discharged.
In the treatment as usual group, patients normally receive psychotherapy every four weeks,
depending on demand. There is no pre-established number of sessions as this depends on the
clinical condition and the patient´s adherence.
In the intervention group, patients will be offered eleven weekly cognitive-behavioral
sessions that will be delivered by psychologists and LPCWs. In addition, they will receive
phone calls from LPCWs to remind them of their appointments.
The sessions will be divided between psychologists and LPCWs in the following scheme:
1. Psychologist
2. Psychologist
3. Psychologist
4. LPCW
5. LPCW
6. Psychologist
7. LPCW
8. LPCW
9. Psychologist
10. LPCW
11. Psychologist
LPCWs will meet with psychologists on a weekly basis to discuss their patients and any safety
concerns.
Patients who exhibit severe mental illness symptoms during the intervention such as suicidal
ideation, schizophrenia or bipolar disorder will be referred to the project psychiatrist for
specialist care.
An array of instruments will be applied during the study to measure mental illness symptoms,
functionality, IPV experience and other forms of violence. These measures will be taken
immediately before starting psychotherapy and two weeks and six months after completing the
intervention in the intervention group. Patients in the control group will have instruments
applied before commencing psychotherapy and fourteen weeks and twenty-two weeks after
starting.
Sample size:
A sample size was calculated according to the following formula (comparison of means from the
intervention and control groups):
n = 2 (Zα + Zβ)² * S² (x1 - x2) ²
The sample size was calculated using values from a previous cognitive-behavioral intervention
for armed-conflict victims of Buenaventura and Quibdó, Colombia
(https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01856673). An Alfa error of 5%, power of 80%, and
standard deviation of 30 was used. The sample size of each arm necessary to obtain a
significant difference in means of symptoms between the control and intervention group is:
n = 2 (1.96 + 0.842)² * 30² / (20) ²
n = 35
According to this calculation a minimum of 35 volunteers must be recruited into each arm per
city (Cali and Tuluá), which means that overall 70 volunteers will be recruited into the
intervention group and 70 volunteers into the control group giving a total of 140 volunteers
in the study.
Information will be collected using digital tablets and transferred to a database designed
for the study. Confidentiality will be ensured by not including identifying variables.
An exploratory analysis to identify extreme values or missing data will be performed and
medical records will be revised to verify some of the information. A sample of the
instruments applied in the study will be audited.
Multiple imputation techniques will be used for all missing data including those resulting
from lost to follow up. Additionally, a sensitivity analysis based on probability weighting
will be used as a covariate in the final analysis for all missing data.
The anticipated results are a reduction in anxiety, depression, PTSD, low self-esteem and
emotional dependency symptoms, which will be greater in patients in the intervention group
compared those in the control group.
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