Reducing Duration of Untreated Psychosis Through Rapid Identification and Engagement

NCT02841956 · Status: TERMINATED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 427

Last updated 2021-06-25

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

Reducing Duration of Untreated Psychosis (DUP) is a primary goal for improving long-term outcomes in young people with a first episode of psychosis (FEP). The "standard of FEP care" within the US focuses on targeted provider education regarding signs and symptoms of early psychosis to motivate patient referrals to FEP services, followed by initiation of services within largely clinic-based settings Experience at the Early Diagnosis and Preventive Treatment (EDAPT) FEP specialty program at U.C. Davis in Sacramento has identified two important bottlenecks to reducing DUP, consistent with reports in the literature from other FEP clinics. These are 1) delays in the identification of psychotic symptoms by referral sources, and 2) delays or disruptions of patient engagement in specialty FEP care. Building upon a comprehensive and established referral network of 20 sites across the Sacramento area (schools/universities, ER/inpatient hospitals, outpatient mental health, primary care), the investigators will address delays in patient identification and engagement using a two-phase, cluster randomized design. The investigators will consecutively test the impact of two interventions to reduce DUP, defined in this RFA as time from first onset of psychotic symptoms to engagement in FEP specialty care. To address identification delays, the investigators will examine the use of standard targeted provider education plus novel technology-enhanced screening compared to standard targeted provider education alone, testing the hypothesis that the education plus technology-enhanced screening will identify more patients, earlier in their illness. To address engagement delays, the investigators will compare the use of a mobile community-based, telepsychiatry-enhanced engagement team to standard clinic-based procedures for intake, engagement and initiation of treatment, to test the hypothesis that the mobile approach facilitates earlier and more stable engagement, thereby reducing DUP. The proposed work will provide new specific evidence-based practices for reducing DUP and improving outcomes through specialty care of individuals with a first episode of psychosis.

Conditions

  • Psychotic Disorders

Interventions

OTHER

Electronic Screen + Education (Phase 1)

PHASE 1 Electronic Screening Arm + Targeted Education: Referral sources will receive the same standard targeted education as active comparator. In addition, the PQ-B (a 21 item screening questionnaire) will be administered to all patients at their first visit to the referral sites (e.g. intake) via an android tablet provided to the site for ease of administration and scoring. The investigators will provide multiple tablets per site so that the screening is available for more than one individual simultaneously and can be completed in any appropriate location. The investigators will allow paper-and-pencil administration for situations where it is more appropriate (e.g. emergency room).

OTHER

Targeted Provider Education (Phase 1)

PHASE 1 Targeted Education Intervention: EDAPT standard targeted provider education1 focuses on increasing awareness about the signs of early psychosis \& building collaborative relationships with community members so community members see EDAPT as a rapid, effective source of help. It consists of a 2-hour workshop describing: 1) how to identify specific early symptoms \& changes associated with the onset of psychotic illness, 2) the benefits of early intervention on treatment outcomes in psychosis, 3) the structure, philosophy \& treatment model of the EDAPT Clinic, and 4) procedures for expeditious referral to our program. Case-based vignettes are reviewed to ensure understanding of the key symptoms.

OTHER

Community Mobile Engagement (Phase 2)

PHASE 2 Community-based Mobile Engagement: Clinical assessment appointments will take place at the EDAPT clinic or within the community, wherever the individual would prefer. With patients deemed eligible for EDAPT services, the EDAPT clinician will obtain vitals and contact the EDAPT psychiatrist with a telemedicine-enabled laptop to complete the psychiatric evaluation remotely. The psychiatrist will prescribe medications and order labs, as indicated. The EDAPT clinician will follow up with the individual within 5 days to determine if the prescribed medication regimen has started.

OTHER

Clinic based Engagement (Phase 2)

PHASE 2 Clinic-based Engagement: The clinical assessment appointment will be completed within the EDAPT clinic. If deemed eligible for EDAPT services, the individual will be scheduled for a clinic-based appointment with the EDAPT psychiatrist within 5 days, who will prescribe medications and order labs as indicated. The EDAPT clinician will follow up with the individual within 5 days of the psychiatric evaluation (by phone or in the clinic) to determine if the prescribed medication regimen has started.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)

    collaborator NIH
  • University of California, Davis

    lead OTHER

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SCREENING
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
12 Years
Max Age
30 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2014-09-30
Primary Completion
2020-03-13
Completion
2020-03-13

Countries

  • United States

Study Locations

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Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT02841956 on ClinicalTrials.gov