Implementation Science Clinical Trial
Official title:
An Exposure-Based Implementation Strategy to Decrease Clinician Anxiety About Delivering Suicide Prevention Evidence-Based Practices
Verified date | May 2024 |
Source | University of Pennsylvania |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Study objectives are to design and pilot test a novel, exposure-based implementation strategy (EBIS) directly targeting clinician anxiety and low self-efficacy for use of evidence-based suicide screening, assessment, and intervention (SSAI) strategies with patients at risk for suicide in community settings. Early phases of this study will develop the EBIS in partnership with community clinicians (n = 15). The last phase of this study is a pilot clinical trial in which 40 community mental health clinicians will be randomized to receive either implementation as usual (IAU) or IAU+EBIS.
Status | Enrolling by invitation |
Enrollment | 55 |
Est. completion date | July 31, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | June 28, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Practicing mental health clinicians who provide direct mental health services to a treatment-seeking population - Proficient in the English language - Have access to a computer with internet connectivity Exclusion Criteria: - Participants will be excluded if they do not see any mental health patients that are at risk for suicide (e.g., they screen out high-risk patients for their individual practice). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Pennsylvania Department of Psychiatry | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Pennsylvania |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Clinician perception of EBIS acceptability for clinical practice | Acceptability of EBIS will be measured via qualitative interviews with participants as well as the Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM), a 4-item, psychometrically-validated measure that indexes the extent to which stakeholders believe an implementation strategy is acceptable. Items on the AIM are rated on a 5-point Likert scale (Range = 4-20) and higher scores indicate greater acceptability. | end of trial period (12 weeks) | |
Primary | Clinician perception of EBIS feasibility and utility for clinical practice | Feasibility of EBIS will with the Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM), a 4-item measure that indexes the extent to which an implementation strategy is perceived as feasible. Items on the FIM are rated on a 5-point Likert scale (Range = 4-20) and higher scores indicate greater acceptability. | end of trial period (12 weeks) | |
Primary | EBIS feasibility as assessed by clinician retention statistics | Feasibility statistics for study retention (e.g., the proportion of recruited clinicians that agrees to be randomized to EBIS, he proportion of randomized clinicians that completes EBIS) | through study completion, an average of 12 weeks | |
Secondary | Clinician Anxiety | Clinician anxiety will be assessed via 10-point Subjective Units of Distress (SUDS), a 10-point Likert rating of subjective distress where 1 = Not at all Distressed and 10 = Very Distressed. | baseline, immediately post-intervention, two week follow up, and 12 week follow up | |
Secondary | Clinician Self-Efficacy Questionnaire | Self-efficacy will be measured via responses to two statements on a 7-point scale measuring clinicians' self-efficacy to use SSAIs, using established question stems from behavioral science (e.g., "If I really wanted to, I could screen every patient I see for suicide risk"). Self-efficacy will be assessed separately for clinician self-efficacy for suicide screening and for use of the Safety Planning Intervention. Higher scores indicate greater self-efficacy. Scores will be averaged for analysis (Range = 1 - 7). | baseline, immediately post-intervention, two week follow up, and 12 week follow up | |
Secondary | Screening use | Use of clinician routine suicide screening in all patient encounters will be indexed via chart-stimulated recall (CSR). CSR is an established technique for examining clinician decision-making and clinical processes beyond what can be determined from chart review or self-report alone. A research team member will review the clinician's deidentified caseload with them for the past clinic week. For each patient seen that week, the researcher will ask brief questions related to the clinicians' suicide-related practices around screening for suicide risk. | baseline, immediately post-intervention, two week follow up, and 12 week follow up | |
Secondary | Safety Planning Intervention Use | Clinician use of the Safety Planning Intervention when indicated (i.e., patient screens positive for suicide risk) will be indexed via chart-stimulated recall. CSR is an established technique for examining clinician decision-making and clinical processes beyond what can be determined from chart review or self-report alone. A research team member will review the clinician's caseload with them for the past clinic week. For each patient seen that week for which the clinician reports screening for suicide risk, the researcher will ask brief questions (no more than 5 minutes) related to the clinicians' follow up intervention to assess clinician use of the Safety Planning Intervention. | baseline, immediately post-intervention, two week follow up, and 12 week follow up |
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