Mental Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effectiveness of User-driven Intervention to Manage Patient Aggression in Mental Health Services
To compare the effects of an educational intervention to usual practice (no specified staff education) on improving treatment culture and supporting team climate in staff members, which further could reduce the need for the use of coercive methods in psychiatric care.
This is a single-blind, two-arm, cluster randomised controlled trial involving 28 psychiatric
hospital wards across Finland.
Units are randomised on an equal basis to receive either staff educational programme
(designed together with staff members, patients and relatives on the study units) or standard
care. Inpatient psychiatric hospital organisations are the unit of randomisation. The cluster
design will be used to avoid contamination between individual staff members in each study
ward. We will use centralized randomisation at the University of Turku (Department of
Mathematics and Statistics). Randomisation will be fully concealed and computer-generated by
an independent statistician, who is not involved in the study. Investigators enrolling wards
cannot foresee assignment. Outcome assessors and statisticians will be kept blinded to
allocation. However, due to the type of intervention, allocation will be unmasked to patients
and their relatives, contact persons in each ward, and health care staff delivering patient
care on the wards after randomisation; this would reflect real-world care. While the Data
Monitoring Committee undertook ongoing safety surveillance, investigators running the
preliminary analysis for the Data Monitoring Committee will be masked to data until
investigators released the database. Further, the statisticians and the National Register
holder who are responsible in Finnish routine data used in this study, will be masked to ward
allocation and patient data in each group. Randomisation will be done after collecting the
baseline data from each unit.
Baseline data on coercive practices used on the units will be collected by the members of the
research team with a help of staff members within the eight weeks, while observational and
interview data related to the quality of the services will be collected by the research team
(only in the intervention units). On the individual level, all staff members working in the
study units, patients, and their relatives are eligible to participate in the study. Staff
survey and interviews with staff members, patient groups and relatives will be done on the
basis of free will. The staff of the unit/research team members will approach patients and
their relatives to explain the purpose of the study and its arrangements orally and in
written format. The opportunity to ask questions about the study will be given to them. Those
that will be assessed having a lack of capacity to give informed consent and declined to
participate will not be interviewed. Staff surveys will be repeated for baseline and
follow-up. On the organisational level, the outcomes related to patient service use will be
assessed 12 and 24 months after baseline data collection.
Assessing quality components: The strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats related
to the new practices will also be discussed and categorised based on SWOT analysis (Strength,
Weakness, Opportunity, Threat). Possible barriers and facilitating factors for change on the
on each unit will be identified. The quality of the service facilities will be assessed by
observations on the units, based on World Health Organization's (2012) QualityRight Tool Kit
focusing on five central quality criteria.
We have systematically searched for, but found no directly relevant past work. We assume that
if the data will be obtained from local hospital registers by sampling 7 clusters (hospitals)
with 265 subjects each in intervention group and 7 clusters with 265 subjects each in control
group, we will have 80% power to detect a difference between the group proportions of
-0.0400. The control group proportion is 0.1100. The intervention group proportion is assumed
to be 0.1100 under the null hypothesis and 0.0700 under the alternative hypothesis. The test
statistic used is the two-sided Z test (unpooled) with an overall significance level at 0.05.
We may assume based on the hospital registers that sample size for the total population
admitted in the study wards in one year will be 3710. However, if we consider a loss of 20%
patients in the local care registers, the total number of patients on the randomised wards
should be about 4454 patients. Further, if we assume 50% response rate for patient survey out
of possible 3710 participants, we will assume that we will obtain 928 filled questionnaires
during 6 month survey data collection period. The sample size calculation was adjusted for
intra-cluster correlation at 0.005.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT05321602 -
Study to Evaluate the PK Profiles of LY03010 in Patients With Schizophrenia or Schizoaffective Disorder
|
Phase 1 | |
Completed |
NCT05080777 -
Pilot Pragmatic Clinical Trial to Embed Tele-Savvy Into Health Care Systems
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06012149 -
Braining: Implementation of Physical Exercise for Patients in Specialist Psychiatry
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03222375 -
SQUEDâ„¢ Series 28.1 Home-use and Treatment of Autowave Reverberator of Autism
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02836080 -
Integrated Collaborative Care Teams for Youth With Mental Health and/or Addiction Challenges (YouthCan IMPACT)
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02907658 -
Efficacy of Internet Use Disorder Prevention
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02710344 -
Using Telehealth to Improve Psychiatric Symptom Management
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT02487888 -
A Study of the Impact of Genetic Testing on Clinical Decision Making and Patient Care
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT02292056 -
Medication Safety and Contraceptive Counseling for Reproductive Aged Women With Psychiatric Conditions
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT02761733 -
The Effectiveness of a Decision-Support Tool for Adult Consumers With Mental Health Needs and Their Care Managers
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01947283 -
Effectiveness of DECIDE in Patient-Provider Communication, Therapeutic Alliance & Care Continuation
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01633138 -
Performance-based Reinforcement to Enhance Cognitive Remediation Therapy
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01690013 -
Life Quality and Health in Patients With Klinefelter Syndrome
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01415323 -
Agitation in the Acute Psychiatric Department
|
||
Completed |
NCT01656707 -
Adaptive Treatment for Adolescent Cannabis Use Disorders
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01701765 -
Outcomes and Discharge of Long-stay Psychiatric Patients
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00375167 -
Efficacy of the Recovery Workbook as a Psychoeducational Tool for Facilitating Recovery
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT00757497 -
Transcranial Direct Current Brain Stimulation to Treat Patients With Childhood-Onset Schizophrenia
|
Phase 1 | |
Terminated |
NCT03527550 -
Cognitive Control Training for Urgency in a Naturalistic Clinical Setting
|
N/A | |
Withdrawn |
NCT03518996 -
Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation and Delirium
|
N/A |