Schizophrenia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Multi-center Randomized Controlled Trial of Critical Time Intervention - Task Shifting (CTI-TS) Versus Usual Care for People With Psychotic Disorders
The study represents the research component of a broader initiative entitled "RedeAmericas".
RedeAmericas (RA) is a collaborative effort of investigators from six cities across Latin
America (Buenos Aires, Cordoba, Medellin, Neuquen, Rio de Janeiro, and Santiago) and Columbia
University in New York.
This is a pilot Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) of Critical Time Intervention—Task Shifting
(CTI-TS). It is designed to address a fundamental gap in the services offered by mental
health clinics. These clinics are the primary locale for outpatient treatment of individuals
with severe mental disorders in the urban areas of Latin America, and they offer some basic
and important clinical care such as pharmacologic treatment onsite. Generally these clinics
also have a major limitation; they have inadequate resources and training for the provision
of in vivo community-based services, that is, services delivered outside of the clinic
facility in homes or elsewhere in the community. In most urban areas, they also have weak
links to primary health care and are not easily accessible to much of the population.
CTI-TS, is a task shifting intervention that at the service user level provides support for
better community living and promotes social integration, and at the system level strengthens
the connections between mental health and primary care clinics. CTI-TS is a time-limited
9-month intervention provided at the critical time when a person is first offered services at
a mental health clinic. During this period CTI-TS workers forge relationships that will shape
the continuing use of services and enhance the potential for recovery over the subsequent
course of time. The overall goal of CTI-TS is to improve the lives of those with severe
mental disorders who receive community-based mental health care.
Critical Time Intervention-Task Shifting (CTI-TS)is delivered by lay Community Mental Health
Workers (CMHWs) and Peer Support Workers (PSWs) based in mental health outpatient service
programs (MHS) and supervised by mental health professionals. These workers provide community
outreach and support to engage service users, their families, primary care practitioners,
peers and other community members in the recovery process.
The CTI-TS program is concerned with improving supports for people recovering from episodes
of mental illness. Examples of areas where extra support may be provided include medication
management, housing or crisis management, help with the family, help obtaining good services
from mental health centers and primary health centers, and help developing social
relationships in the community.
The program is provided by a CTI-TS team, including a community mental health worker and a
peer support worker (someone who has used mental health services in the past, and has
recovered). All of the CTI-TS activities will last 9 months. The evaluation of how people
fare will last 18 months. The activities of CTI-TS will be in addition to the usual care
provided by the subject's local health service. Usual care might include meeting with a
mental health professional, meeting with a social worker, and/or obtaining prescriptions for
medicine. This study will compare how people fare who have participated in the CTI-TS
activities against the group of people who received only the regular services of this
community mental health center. As part of the study, a trained researcher will meet with
each subject for an interview at the beginning of the project, again 9 months later, and
again after 18 months. These interviews will ask questions about how the subject is doing
with his/her health and quality of life, and if the subject is getting help or support with
problems.
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