Stigma, Social Clinical Trial
Official title:
Increasing Provider Competence for Treating Stress-related Mental Health Conditions in Low Resource Settings
Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals (LGBTI) present increased morbidity compared to the general population, which is attributed to healthcare discrimination and lack of LGBT-specific expertise, especially in high-stigma countries. Motivated by fear, Romanian LGBTI conceal their identities and report significantly more barriers to healthcare access than heterosexuals. Poor mental health, specifically anxiety and depression, is elevated for Romanian LGBTI, and associated with poor physical health (e.g., HIV risk, alcohol abuse.) However, LGBT-competent mental health professionals (MHPs) are nearly non-existent in Romania, and thus the negative impact of homophobia on mental health cannot be ameliorated. Given that a pilot of an in-person LGBT-affirmative MHP training recently tested in Romania showed significant receptivity and increased competence among MHPs, this training is ripe for testing its feasibility and efficacy in creating significant change via mobile delivery, in a randomized controlled trial (RCT). Proving the efficacy of this first mobile training and supervision model has high potential for cost-effective and expeditious boundless dissemination. Aim 1 will test the relative feasibility and efficacy of the mHealth MHP training by conducting an RCT comparing a mobile training (MT) of MHP LGBT-competency program (n=60) to the equivalent in-person training (IPT) (n=60) recently piloted. Both programs' content and structure will be identical (2-day trainings and two boosters 6 months apart). At baseline, 4, 8, and 12 months, all MHPs' LGBT-related attitudes, knowledge of LGBT health needs and clinical practice, and LGBT caseload will be assessed in a mobile fashion. In Aim 2 will test the efficacy of a companion mHealth supervision and consultation program in maintaining LGBT competency and enhancing LGBT-friendly practice. Half of the MHPs in each group will receive mHealth supervision and expert consultation program, consisting of monthly 2-hour virtual group meetings to discuss case studies, in order to determine the added benefit of mobile supervision. At the end of the study, 10 MHPs will provide interview-based program feedback. In Aim 3, the investigators will build mHealth research capacity among MHPs by demonstrating how to integrate mobile data collection tools in clinical practice to monitor client progress for personalized treatment plans.
Participants and Procedures. Partner Consortium. The PI has strategically chosen four types
of partners in order to maximize the sustainability of our training. The study team's
multidisciplinarity will increase the potential for reach across domains that are pivotal in
changing the landscape of mental health for LGBTI in Romania. First, the team partnered with
a multi-service provider, the Romanian Association against AIDS (ARAS), a non-governmental
not-for-profit organization founded in 1992 to support the health of hidden and vulnerable
groups including LGBTI. ARAS intends to expand the depth and breadth of its LGBT-competency
in mental health. Second, the team has received the essential support of academics (Hyperion
University and Professors Călugaru and Dumitriu), which are forefront agents for social
change. Third, individual MHPs in private practice who are connected with key associations
have signed on as liaisons to their affiliated organizations (e.g., Bellanima Center for
Psychotherapy and Psychiatry) to facilitate training participation. Fourth, the team
continues its fruitful collaboration with their technical developer, Data Center Solutions
(DCS), who built the mobile platform on which the team delivered live therapy for DMDN,
collected real-time mental health and behavioral data, and disseminated sexual health
materials. DCS is an expert in health systems information technology (medical e-learning;
patient health-promotion), and will build our mHealth training platform.
Inclusion Criteria. 120 Romanian practicing MHPs (psychologists or psychiatrists) or MHPs in
training will be eligible to participate.
Recruitment. The Partner Consortium will advertise the project via web-postings, listservs
and eblasts to their national circles. Facebook ads were the most successful source of
recruitment for DMDN. The team will thus be able to canvas all regions of Romania. Further,
due to the pilot work, the team is maintaining contact with close to 100 MHPs from Bucharest
(the capital), and other cities (e.g., Sibiu, Iasi, Cluj Napoca, Timisoara). While they will
not be eligible to participate because they had exposure to the program, they will circulate,
as indicated by their Letters of Support, future trainings among their circles of individual
practice and professional affiliations (e.g., Romanian Collegiate of Psychologists, the
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Association of Romania).
Screening and Consent. Study ads will link to the Qualtrics electronic screener easily
accessed from any mobile device. MHPs will take the 5-minute survey (Appendix 2) to determine
eligibility, and be randomized to either the MT group or IPT group (based on age and
geographical region). The study budgeted travel stipends for one-third of the MHPs, whom the
team anticipate live outside Bucharest, such that travel costs will not impede their
participation in IPT and to ensure that each group will include samples that are unbiased
geographically. Notably, the pilot included non-Bucharest residents. Alternate training dates
will be offered for those unable to attend the trainings. Group assignment, training dates,
locations, and link to a Qualtrics baseline (BL) survey will be sent prior to the training.
The BL contains the consent form with our contacts for questions. The team tested these
procedures in the pilot, during which the PI answered study questions from MHPs via email.
Sixty MHPs will be randomized to receive a 2-day IPT in Bucharest, and 60 MHPs will be
randomized to the equivalent 3-day MT, on a DCS-designed platform compatible with any mobile
device, and with document-sharing and voice-conferencing capabilities. The didactic trainings
will be interspersed with answering MHP's questions (voice or text).
Supervision and Consultation. After the first follow-up (4 months post training), half of the
IPT MHPs and half of the MT MHPs (n=30 per group, total n=60) will receive 2-hour monthly
mobile supervision using a forum format on our mobile platform for 8 months. DCS will design
a group chat feature, similar to the one they devised for a previous pilot study. The live
monthly supervision will occur on this platform after the 4-month and before the 12-month
assessments. This system will provide MHPs with a fully automated and interactive mobile
platform through which they will participate in supervision, as well as submit questions and
receive answers for case consultation from the experts (Dr. Pachankis and DMDN intervention
psychologists) within 48 hours. Further, MHPs will receive case studies through our mobile
website, monthly, with response options asking them their best approach to helping the client
(e.g., common LGBT stressor situations such as coming out, negotiating sexual safety,
reducing isolation, or replacing health-depleting behaviors such as excessive drinking with
healthy alternatives). Cases are fully discussed during supervision. At the end of the study,
those who did not receive supervision will be given access to all the case studies and the
mobile consultation site to achieve equity.
Boosters. We will hold two 2-hour IPT and MT boosters, respectively, 6 and 12 months post
training, and provide an overview of LGBT-affirmative therapy principles, their incorporation
into clinical practice, clarifications, and troubleshooting. Case studies will be included
covering common issues raised by LGBTI.
Measures of MHP Attitudes, Knowledge, and Clinical Practice. The mixed-methods design
involves qualitative interviews (n=10) and 30-min. self-administered internet-based
quantitative surveys (n=120) by MHPs, the latter being administered at BL, and at 4, 8, and
12-month follow-ups. Surveys will be identical and assess, in a mobile fashion, changes in
MHPs' LGBT attitudes, knowledge of LGBT health needs, clinical practice skills, and LGBT
caseload.
Feasibility and Acceptability. Feasibility measures include data on session attendance.
Acceptability measures include 5-min. session rating surveys (on mobile devices), and the 10
qualitative interviews.
Efficacy. MHPs will report their age, gender, specialization, years of clinical practice, and
LGBT caseload. We will measure attitudes, knowledge and clinical skills; and the presence of
explicit and implicit stigma and homophobia.
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