Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04234815 |
Other study ID # |
9782 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 28, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
February 23, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
September 2022 |
Source |
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This cluster-randomized controlled trial (c-RCT) evaluates the effectiveness of a brief,
single-session psychosocial workshop, "CETA Short Session" (CSS), for reducing symptoms of
distress and functional impairment and increasing treatment engagement among conflict
veterans and their families in Ukraine. The CSS workshop includes psychoeducation, review of
a self-assessment, safety screening, and training in cognitive coping. This will be evaluated
against a single-session comparison workshop that includes all of the same workshop elements
except for cognitive coping. Registration for both conditions includes completion of a
self-assessment. Participants with safety concerns or very severe symptoms will be
immediately referred to mental health treatment; others will be asked to wait for one month
before being reassessed and, if indicated, referred to mental health treatment. Both
conditions include an individual check-in phone call one week after the workshop. Distress
and functional impairment outcomes will be assessed one month from baseline. Treatment
engagement outcomes will be assessed three months from referral. The investigators
hypothesize that individuals attending sessions randomized to CSS will show greater
improvement in mental health outcomes and greater treatment engagement than those attending
sessions randomized to the comparison condition.
With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in Spring 2019, the RCT was paused to develop and
pilot an online version of both the CSS and comparison workshop. The trial protocol has now
been expanded to continue the effectiveness trial while allowing for both online and [when/if
feasible] in-person intervention delivery.
Description:
Community-based organizations in Ukraine that are currently providing social services to
veterans or their families and are interested in receiving training to provide CSS will be
engaged as implementing partners. Individuals selected to be providers at these organizations
will complete a 2-day Provider Training and will additionally receive ongoing supervision
over the course of the study to ensure intervention fidelity and appropriate response and
support to individuals needing referral to mental health treatment.
Cluster-level randomization to CSS or eTAU will be carried out at the workshop level within
provider, such that all Providers will deliver both the CSS and eTAU workshops to groups that
have been randomly allocated to either receive CSS or eTAU. In this way, all organizations
will offer both CSS and eTAU, integrated into each organization's regular program offerings
and advertised through organizations' regular communication channels.
As part of the registration and triage procedures included as regular programming in both
arms of the trial, participants will self-complete a short, locally validated Self-Assessment
Form that assesses symptoms of distress (depression, post-traumatic stress), functional
impairment, and safety risk (two safety-related questions assessing recent thoughts of harm
to self or others). This assessment will be completed in advance and reviewed by an M&E staff
member prior to the workshop, but assessment scores will not determine workshop eligibility
(e.g., people with low scores can still participate). One exception to this is that any
individuals who respond positively to either of the safety questions will be contacted by the
CSS/eTAU provider within 24-hours for further safety assessment. If no safety issues are
identified, they will be registered for the workshop as normal; however, identified safety
issues will trigger an appropriate safety planning or referral response as described below,
which may include bypassing the workshop in lieu of direct enrollment in treatment services.
At the end of the workshop, participants will be informed of the study and invited to
participate; those who agree will provide informed consent.
After the workshop, as part of regular programming the provider will follow up individually
with participants to discuss recommended next steps. Evaluation of level of need, and
therefore choice of follow-up response, will be made by the provider using the
self-assessment results as well as any information reported to the provider during the
workshop (such as new safety concerns, or changes in problem scores). Follow-up contacts will
be ordered by priority.
1. Individuals who indicate any new safety concerns at the workshop will be contacted
within 24 hours for further assessment to determine the appropriate referrals and/or
safety plan.
2. Individuals with high symptom scores, but no safety concerns, will be contacted within
72 hours and offered a referral to outpatient mental health care.
3. Individuals with moderate symptom scores will be contacted within 1 week for triage and
encouraged to use the newly learned skills over the next month. On that triage phone
call, participants will be told they will be re-assessed in one month to determine if
they still require mental health treatment (at which time they would be referred if
indicated). For those who attended CSS (rather than eTAU), providers will also ask about
participant use of the cognitive coping skill over the past week, including asking them
how often they've used it, whether it has been helpful, and soliciting an example
through a series of questions that walk them through the skill.
At one month, all study participants who were not immediately referred to outpatient mental
health services at baseline will be sent an individual link to re-administer the
self-assessment, the CSS skill check, and complete an implementation feedback questionnaire.
For all study participants who receive an outpatient mental health referral, either immediate
or delayed, engagement outcomes will be assessed three months following referral.