Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT06063824 |
Other study ID # |
328697 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 2023 |
Est. completion date |
April 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2023 |
Source |
University of Manchester |
Contact |
Finbar J Dickinson |
Phone |
07455 532340 |
Email |
finbar.dickinson[@]postgrad.manchester.ac.uk |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
People sometimes wait a long time for psychological therapy and could have this sooner if
they had only one session. This is because they may only require one session to meet their
needs if this is provided quickly (Cannistrà et al., 2020) and may therefore require less
therapy overall, and if they can access this, then services can run more efficiently, and
overall capacity of services to offer therapy can increase.
Some therapies are hard to deliver in one session. But the method of levels (MOL) was
conceived to be highly flexible with respect to session length and number of sessions, and
this makes it easier to use in one-off sessions. It is designed to help people focus on
problems they describe as being most relevant to them and to find their own solutions.
We want to know if we can give one session of MOL to people seeking help from their GP. We
want to see if they find it helpful. So we need to find out if they want and attend the
session and if they tell us about it.
This will help us decide whether to run a larger study exploring whether one session of MOL
can help meet the goals of people seeking GP support. This could tell us whether MOL could
help reduce waiting times.
We will ask people using GP surgeries if they want to participate. They will be offered one
session of MOL with their usual support. We will ask them to complete questionnaires to see
if they found the therapy helpful.
We will note how many participate, attend sessions, and complete questionnaires. We will
check whether participants liked having MOL and will interview 10-12 of them to learn about
what they thought.
The research will be funded by The University of Manchester.
Description:
DESIGN This mixed-methods, randomised, controlled, single-arm acceptability and feasibility
pilot trial study will use a within-subjects design featuring an experimental group
(receiving one session of MOL alongside usual treatment) and no control group. The study will
contain a qualitative element through the analysis of qualitative questionnaire and interview
feedback.
The study's contingency plan involves adopting a case series methodology featuring a smaller
number of participants (all of whom would be interviewed).
RECRUITMENT One group of participants will be recruited: service users of a GP surgery who
will be offered one session of MOL. We intend to have 5 participating GP practices recruited
for the study, and the plan is to recruit 25 patients. Of these, a further intention is to
recruit 10 to 12 participants to attend an interview about their experiences of their
session. The overall recruitment target is 25 participants across the 5 participating GP
surgeries.
The contingency plan would involve recruiting a smaller number of participants, all of whom
would be interviewed.
PROCEDURE Potential participants registered at a Manchester GP surgery will be asked if they
would like to take part in the study. This will be through a verbal question from their GP, a
letter sent to them by the practice manager, a poster, or a text from the GP surgery.
Potential participants who express interest in taking part (by informing the surgery or their
GP or by signing and submitting the consent to contact form on the website whose URL will be
texted to them) will have an information sheet passed to them, and their contact details will
be shared (by their GP if they express interest to their GP) with the trainee clinical
psychologist.
After 24 hours have elapsed (to provide time to read the information sheet), these
individuals will be contacted on a telephone used specifically for the study, whereupon the
trainee clinical psychologist will check whether they still want to take part and will take
consent if so. Consent will be taken by participants either signing an online consent form or
by coming to the surgery to sign a physical consent form. At this point, the individual will
complete an initial Core Outcome Measure and an initial screening tool (either in person if
they have come to the surgery or over the phone if they have completed the consent form
online). If participants score above 10 on the initial Core Outcome Measure, meet the
inclusion criteria, do not meet the exclusion criteria, and express that they are having a
difficulty with which they would like help, they will be recruited as a participant by the
trainee clinical psychologist and told their participant ID number. At this point, a summary
will be provided by their GP of any relevant risk information.
Participants will be asked to complete an initial set of outcome measures in addition to the
completed Core Outcome Measure (i.e. a demographic questionnaire, the PHQ-9, the GAD-7 and
the PSYCHLOPS), which they may complete and return on paper or electronically via Qualtrics
(using their ID number), Qualtrics is an online survey system approved by the University of
Manchester, and a unique link to the measures on Qualtrics will be emailed to each
participant in order that they can complete these.
Participants will be given details of how to book an MOL session electronically. A random
selection of 10-12 participants will be invited to attend post-session interviews, and more
participants will be randomly selected and invited as needed until 10-12 participants have
confirmed their willingness to attend interviews. The participants will be offered some
potential appointment times (via email) from a list of those available, which will be
allocated to whichever patients request a given slot first. The patients will then receive a
confirmation of their appointment time via email.
At their appointment time, they will arrive at their GP surgery and will be collected from
the waiting room by the trainee clinical psychologist. After an introduction, the single
session of MOL will be carried out, which will be up to 60 minutes in length.
After their sessions have been completed, participants will be securely emailed a link to the
qualitative questionnaire and the post-session quantitative measures. All participants will
be contacted by the trainee clinical psychologist a week after their session, and during this
conversation, the trainee clinical psychologist will check in with them, remind them that we
are emailing them the link to the relevant questionnaires, and ask them to complete these.
At the post-session, semi-structured interview (which will take place at The University of
Manchester, at the GP surgery at which the relevant participant is registered, or online via
Microsoft Teams), a volunteer (who will have an honorary contract with The University of
Manchester) will ask a series of questions to explore how the participants felt about their
MOL session. These interviews will be transcribed by the trainee clinical psychologist.
Participants will be informed (by email) that they have not been selected for interview once
the required number of participants have been successfully interviewed. The interviews will
last up to 60 minutes approximately, and they will be recorded via Microsoft Teams if they
take place virtually. Recordings will be deleted once their computer-generated transcripts
(produced by Microsoft Teams) have been checked and used to enable complete transcription
(and once the full transcripts have been checked and uploaded to the Research Data Storage
Service). Computer-generated transcripts will be deleted once they have been checked.
The interviews will be conducted, recorded and uploaded to the Research Data Storage Service
by the volunteer, and the interviews will take place after the MOL session has been taken
place (and as soon as the participant and volunteer can find a mutually agreeable time).
For interviews taking place over Microsoft Teams, the plan is for video of the interviews to
be recorded to ease the demands of transcription and to facilitate quicker uploading from the
recording device to the Research Data Storage Service (and because Microsoft Teams cannot
record audio without also recording video). If participants being interviewed via Teams do
not wish to have video of the interview recorded, they may opt to turn their cameras off.
All participants will be invited to attend an interview in the event that the study's
contingency plan is adopted.
ANALYSIS Data regarding the perceived acceptability of the single session of MOL will be
obtained via the qualitative questionnaire that will be hosted on Qualtrics and by
transcripts of participant interviews. All data collected will be pseudonymous. These data
will be analysed thematically and in accordance with the principles detailed by Braun and
Clarke (2019) - they will be perused carefully several times before codes are constructed and
then arranged into possible themes. These will be continually reconsidered with reference to
the qualitative data, and they will then be given names and definitions.
In order to convey information regarding feasibility, the percentages of participants who
attend their session and who complete the questionnaires will be calculated and described,
and means and standard deviations of questionnaire scores before and after the session of MOL
will be presented. Figures concerning recruitment will also be described alongside these. If
it is possible, we aim to estimate the effect size of single-session MOL in primary care by
referring to the abovementioned means and standard deviations. A statistical analysis plan
will be constructed and approved before data analysis begins.
In the event of the contingency plan being adopted, the revised research question would be
"Does a single session of MOL delivered in primary care lead to a significant change in
clinical outcome measures?" Therefore, statistical analysis would differ in these
circumstances, and inferential statistics would be required.