Suicide Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Clinician Virtual Human Interaction Training in Emotional Self-Awareness on Patients Suicidal Ideation and Suicide Crisis Syndrome: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | November 2022 |
Source | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Working with patients at risk for suicide is highly stressful for clinicians and often elicits powerful negative emotional responses that may adversely affect suicidal outcomes. A proposed explanation has been that negative emotional responses may result in less empathic communication and unwitting rejection of the patient, which is liable to damage therapeutic alliance. Thus, there is a need for clinician training in effective management of negative emotions towards suicidal patients, which can result in tangible improvement in suicidal outcomes. The training must be web-based, scalable and easy to disseminate, making it available to clinicians everywhere. In this project, the study team will address this critical need by using Virtual Human Interaction (VHI) to train outpatient clinicians in emotional self-awareness (ESA), which includes both recognition of one's own negative emotional responses, and ability to engage in verbal empathic communication with acutely suicidal patients. The study team will conduct a prospective multisite, blinded, randomized trial comparing VHI ESA training with a Control condition, which will assess both clinician-level and patient-level outcomes in 80 outpatient clinician participants (CPs) and 400 of their participating patients (PPs). Using the same VHI scenarios, the ESA group will receive clinician-focused, comprehensive feedback in ESA, while the Control group will assess the VH's suicide risk without receiving the ESA feedback. The study team will measure efficacy of the VHI ESA training on clinicians by comparing ESA feedback and Control CPs' post-training (T2) ESA towards virtual humans, adjusting for pre-training (T1) ESA. The study team will measure the impact of the VHI ESA training on patients' suicidal outcomes by assessing the primary and secondary outcome variables in both CPs and PPs three times: at baseline (T0), after the first post-training treatment session (T3) and one-month post-training (T4). The study team will examine the role of therapeutic alliance as a possible mediator of the relationship between clinicians' ESA and their patients' Suicidal Ideation (SI) and Suicide Crisis Syndrome (SCS). To accomplish this goal, the study team will use the novel validated suicide risk assessment instruments developed in preliminary studies: the Therapist Response Questionnaire - Suicide Form (TRQ-SF), which assesses negative emotional responses to suicidal patients, and the Suicide Crisis inventory (SCI), which assesses the SCS severity and predicts near-term suicidal behavior. For web-based VHI training the study team will use the already tested and disseminated web-based empathy-teaching platform, coupled with an assessment of verbal empathy measured by the Empathic Communication Coding System (ECCS).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 213 |
Est. completion date | June 5, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | May 31, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility | Clinician Participant Inclusion Criteria: - a staff clinician or trainee in one of the Psychiatry outpatient clinics of the MSHS or Florida International University/Citrus Health Network outpatient clinics - have a caseload of 5 - 10 patients meeting PP inclusion and exclusion criteria. Exclusion Criteria: - non-approval for study participation by department chairman, training director or clinical supervisor. Patient Participant Inclusion Criteria: - currently in ongoing outpatient treatment at one of the recruitment clinics - have SI in the past month as defined by the CSSRS, have a lifetime history of actual SA as defined by the CSSRS or to have a confirmed psychiatric emergency room visit or hospitalization within the past two weeks. Exclusion Criteria: - a need for hospitalization at the time of study enrollment - acute medical illness, cognitive impairment, linguistic limitation precluding understanding of the consent or research questions - and lack of contact information needed for follow up assessment. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Florida | Gainesville | Florida |
United States | Florida International University | Miami | Florida |
United States | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | New York | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | Citrus Health Network, Inc., Florida International University, University of Florida |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Suicide Crisis Inventory (SCI) | A 49-item self-report instrument for the assessment of the severity of the Suicidal Crisis Syndrome (SCS), an acute state shown to correlate with a near-term suicide attempt. Items are rated by self-report on a five-point scale ranging from 0=not at all to 4=extremely. Full scale from 0-196, with higher score indicating increased suicide risk. | Baseline (T0) | |
Primary | Suicide Crisis Inventory (SCI) | A 49-item self-report instrument for the assessment of the severity of the Suicidal Crisis Syndrome (SCS), an acute state shown to correlate with a near-term suicide attempt. Items are rated by self-report on a five-point scale ranging from 0=not at all to 4=extremely. Full scale from 0-196, with higher score indicating increased suicide risk. | 6 weeks (T3 = One month after T2) | |
Primary | Suicide Crisis Inventory (SCI) | A 49-item self-report instrument for the assessment of the severity of the Suicidal Crisis Syndrome (SCS), an acute state shown to correlate with a near-term suicide attempt. Items are rated by self-report on a five-point scale ranging from 0=not at all to 4=extremely. Full scale from 0-196, with higher score indicating increased suicide risk. | 10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Primary | Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation (BSS) | A well validated 21-item self-report measure of active and passive suicidal desires will be used to assess severity of patient SI pre- and post-training. Scores on each item range from 0 to 2, full scale from 0-42, with higher scores indicating greater severity of SI. | Baseline (T0) | |
Primary | Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation (BSS) | A well validated 21-item self-report measure of active and passive suicidal desires will be used to assess severity of patient SI pre- and post-training. Scores on each item range from 0 to 2, full scale from 0-42, with higher scores indicating greater severity of SI. | 6 weeks (T3 = One month post T2) | |
Primary | Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation (BSS) | A well validated 21-item self-report measure of active and passive suicidal desires will be used to assess severity of patient SI pre- and post-training. Scores on each item range from 0 to 2, full scale from 0-42, with higher scores indicating greater severity of SI. | 10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Secondary | TRQ-SF (Therapist Response Questionnaire Short Form) | 10-item, Likert-type scale designed to capture clinicians' emotional responses to acutely suicidal patients. TRQ-SF individual item scores range from 0 (Not at all) to 4 (Extremely). The scale probes suicide-related negative emotional response to patients with three sub-scales: Affiliation (5 items), Distress (3 items), and Hopefulness (2 items). The potential range for TRQ total scores is 0-40. Higher score indicate higher risk of suicide. | Baseline (T0) | |
Secondary | TRQ-SF (Therapist Response Questionnaire Short Form) | 10-item, Likert-type scale designed to capture clinicians' emotional responses to acutely suicidal patients. TRQ-SF individual item scores range from 0 (Not at all) to 4 (Extremely). The scale probes suicide-related negative emotional response to patients with three sub-scales: Affiliation (5 items), Distress (3 items), and Hopefulness (2 items). The potential range for TRQ total scores is 0-40. Higher score indicate higher risk of suicide. | 1 week (T1) | |
Secondary | TRQ-SF (Therapist Response Questionnaire Short Form) | 10-item, Likert-type scale designed to capture clinicians' emotional responses to acutely suicidal patients. TRQ-SF individual item scores range from 0 (Not at all) to 4 (Extremely). The scale probes suicide-related negative emotional response to patients with three sub-scales: Affiliation (5 items), Distress (3 items), and Hopefulness (2 items). The potential range for TRQ total scores is 0-40. Higher score indicate higher risk of suicide. | 2 weeks (T2) | |
Secondary | TRQ-SF (Therapist Response Questionnaire Short Form) | 10-item, Likert-type scale designed to capture clinicians' emotional responses to acutely suicidal patients. TRQ-SF individual item scores range from 0 (Not at all) to 4 (Extremely). The scale probes suicide-related negative emotional response to patients with three sub-scales: Affiliation (5 items), Distress (3 items), and Hopefulness (2 items). The potential range for TRQ total scores is 0-40. Higher score indicate higher risk of suicide. | 6 weeks (T3 = One month post T2) | |
Secondary | TRQ-SF (Therapist Response Questionnaire Short Form) | 10-item, Likert-type scale designed to capture clinicians' emotional responses to acutely suicidal patients. TRQ-SF individual item scores range from 0 (Not at all) to 4 (Extremely). The scale probes suicide-related negative emotional response to patients with three sub-scales: Affiliation (5 items), Distress (3 items), and Hopefulness (2 items). The potential range for TRQ total scores is 0-40. Higher score indicate higher risk of suicide. | 10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Secondary | Empathic Communication Coding System (ECCS) | An expert-rated scale developed to code empathetic opportunities, de?ned as an explicit, clear, and direct statement of emotion, progress, or challenge by the patient. The ECCS also codes healthcare providers' verbal responses to these opportunities ranging from level 6 to level 0, denial of patient's perspective. The CPs' responses to the empathetic opportunities presented by the VHI will be coded with this scale. Full scale from 0-6, with higher score indicating more shared feeling or experience. | 1 week (T1) | |
Secondary | Empathic Communication Coding System (ECCS) | An expert-rated scale developed to code empathetic opportunities, de?ned as an explicit, clear, and direct statement of emotion, progress, or challenge by the patient. The ECCS also codes healthcare providers' verbal responses to these opportunities ranging from level 6 to level 0, denial of patient's perspective. The CPs' responses to the empathetic opportunities presented by the VHI will be coded with this scale. Full scale from 0-6, with higher score indicating more shared feeling or experience. | 2 weeks (T2) | |
Secondary | Columbia Suicide-Severity Rating Scale (CSSRS) | A semi-structured interview of current and past suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Full range from 0 to 9, with higher score indicating higher intensity suicidal ideation. | Baseline (T0) | |
Secondary | Columbia Suicide-Severity Rating Scale (CSSRS) | A semi-structured interview of current and past suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Full range from 0 to 9, with higher score indicating higher intensity suicidal ideation. | 10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Secondary | Working Alliance Inventory Short Form (WAI) | Well-validated 12 item, 7-point Likert scale, self-report patient and clinician questionnaire with demonstrated predictive value for psychotherapeutic treatment adherence and outcomes. Full scale from 12-84, with higher scores indicating better alliance.
The WAI-SR is a patient-rated questionnaire. Patients rate items on a 5-point Likert scale anchored at each end with 'rarely or never' (1) and 'always' (5). The full score range from 5 to 20. Higher scores indicate a better therapeutic alliance. |
Baseline (T0) | |
Secondary | Working Alliance Inventory Short Form (WAI) | Well-validated 12 item, 7-point Likert scale, self-report patient and clinician questionnaire with demonstrated predictive value for psychotherapeutic treatment adherence and outcomes. Full scale from 12-84, with higher scores indicating better alliance.
The WAI-SR is a patient-rated questionnaire. Patients rate items on a 5-point Likert scale anchored at each end with 'rarely or never' (1) and 'always' (5). The full score range from 5 to 20. Higher scores indicate a better therapeutic alliance. |
6 weeks (T3 = One month post T2) | |
Secondary | Working Alliance Inventory Short Form (WAI) | Well-validated 12 item, 7-point Likert scale, self-report patient and clinician questionnaire with demonstrated predictive value for psychotherapeutic treatment adherence and outcomes. Full scale from 12-84, with higher scores indicating better alliance.
The WAI-SR is a patient-rated questionnaire. Patients rate items on a 5-point Likert scale anchored at each end with 'rarely or never' (1) and 'always' (5). The full score range from 5 to 20. Higher scores indicate a better therapeutic alliance. |
10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Secondary | Clinician Prediction Scale (CPS) | A one-item 10-point Likert Scale will be used to assess clinicians' judgement of patient suicide risk. Full score from 0-10, with higher score indicating higher risk of making a suicide attempt in the next 6 months if untreated. | 1 week (T1) | |
Secondary | Clinician Prediction Scale (CPS) | A one-item 10-point Likert Scale will be used to assess clinicians' judgement of patient suicide risk. Full score from 0-10, with higher score indicating higher risk of making a suicide attempt in the next 6 months if untreated. | 2 weeks (T2) | |
Secondary | VHI training utility survey | CPs ratings of satisfaction with the VHI through a satisfaction survey completed online at the 2nd VHI interaction. The survey has six items adapted from the Maastricht Assessment of Simulated Patients. Total score from 0-36 with higher score indicating higher satisfaction with virtual human interaction. | 2 weeks (T2) | |
Secondary | Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) | A well-validated 10-item questionnaire that measures patient's perception of healthcare provider's empathy, with each item measured on a 5-point scale: Poor =1, Fair=2, Good=3, Very Good=4, Excellent=5. Full score from 10-50, with higher score indicating better healthcare provider's empathy perceived by the patient. | Baseline (T0) | |
Secondary | Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) | A well-validated 10-item questionnaire that measures patient's perception of healthcare provider's empathy, with each item measured on a 5-point scale: Poor =1, Fair=2, Good=3, Very Good=4, Excellent=5. Full score from 10-50, with higher score indicating better healthcare provider's empathy perceived by the patient. | 6 weeks (T3 = One month post T2) | |
Secondary | Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) | A well-validated 10-item questionnaire that measures patient's perception of healthcare provider's empathy, with each item measured on a 5-point scale: Poor =1, Fair=2, Good=3, Very Good=4, Excellent=5. Full score from 10-50, with higher score indicating better healthcare provider's empathy perceived by the patient. | 10 weeks (T4 = One month after T3) | |
Secondary | Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) | Well-validated 8-item self-report instrument measuring patient's medication adherence and barriers to it. Full scale is from 0-10, with higher score indicating better adherence. | Baseline (T0) | |
Secondary | Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) | Well-validated 8-item self-report instrument measuring patient's medication adherence and barriers to it. Full scale is from 0-10, with higher score indicating better adherence. | 6 weeks (T3 = One month post T2) | |
Secondary | Medication Adherence Rating Scale (MARS) | Well-validated 8-item self-report instrument measuring patient's medication adherence and barriers to it. Full scale is from 0-10, with higher score indicating better adherence. | 10 weeks (T4 = one month after T3) | |
Secondary | Facial Affective Coding System (FACS) | The Facial Action Coding System (FACS) is a comprehensive, anatomically based system for describing all visually discernible facial movement, breaking down facial expressions into individual components of muscle movement. FACS, using Noldus FaceReader Software, will be applied to video recordings of clinicians interacting with the VHs. The system will evaluate clinicians' facial affective behavior to detect the presence of basic emotions, including sadness, happiness, anger, disgust, surprise, and fear. Duration of analyzed video segments in minutes and seconds, as well as computerized character values of emotions detected by the software, will be provided for analysis. | 1 week (T1) | |
Secondary | Facial Affective Coding System (FACS) | The Facial Action Coding System (FACS) is a comprehensive, anatomically based system for describing all visually discernible facial movement, breaking down facial expressions into individual components of muscle movement. FACS, using Noldus FaceReader Software, will be applied to video recordings of clinicians interacting with the VHs. The system will evaluate clinicians' facial affective behavior to detect the presence of basic emotions, including sadness, happiness, anger, disgust, surprise, and fear. Duration of analyzed video segments in minutes and seconds, as well as computerized character values of emotions detected by the software, will be provided for analysis. | 2 weeks (T2) | |
Secondary | Proportion of Nonsensical VH Responses | The number of nonsensical and sensical VH responses will be manually coded. Members of the research team will code nonsensical and sensical VH responses through assessment clinician transcripts with the VH, which are generated automatically after each VH interaction. The proportion of nonsensical to sensical counts per transcript will be calculated, and items are rated nominally as 0 = nonsensical and 1 = sensical. | 1 week (T1) | |
Secondary | Proportion of Nonsensical VH Responses | The number of nonsensical and sensical VH responses will be manually coded. Members of the research team will code nonsensical and sensical VH responses through assessment clinician transcripts with the VH, which are generated automatically after each VH interaction. The proportion of nonsensical to sensical counts per transcript will be calculated, and items are rated nominally as 0 = nonsensical and 1 = sensical. | 2 weeks (T2) |
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