Purpose

Although evidence-based clinical interventions (CI) are a preferred treatment option for patients with depression, CIs are rarely available in community primary care settings. When available, CIs are often delivered with poor fidelity and abandoned by practitioners during the initial months post-training. Identifying effective implementation strategies to support the adoption, reach, and sustained use with fidelity of these CIs could enhance the effectiveness of primary care-based treatment of depression, as primary care is where most treatment for this disorder is delivered. Current models of primacy care practitioner training and supervision follow standard formal didactic procedures that might not be sufficient for successful adoption, high-fidelity delivery, and sustainment of CIs. Automated decision support tools and feedback systems embedded in health informatics technology have been found to be effective in supporting the use of best practices and hence might be useful for the transition from training to sustained CI use. In practice, however, these tools are ignored by practitioners, have mixed success on outcomes, and can hinder clinical care owing to poor design. Problem Solving Treatment Aid (PST-Aid), an educate and reorganize implementation strategy, is a web-based app that promotes practitioner-client collaboration in the use of PST for goal setting and action planning. A pilot randomized trial comparing Problem Solving Treatment (PST) training-as-usual to training plus PST-Aid found PST-Aid was deemed to be appropriate and usable to both practitioner and client users with preliminary support for benefits in depression outcomes.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Practitioner Participants. (a) are employed by a clinic that is an OCHIN clinical network member; - Practitioner Participants. (b) hold a master's degree in social work, psychology, counseling, or a related field; - Practitioner Participants. (c) provide psychotherapeutic care in the OCHIN network; - Practitioner Participants. (d) have not previously received formal training in PST as defined by University of Washington Advancing Integrated Mental Health Solutions Center (AIMS) criteria; - Practitioner Participants. (e) are not currently receiving specialized training outside of standard clinic support to implement a depression-specific psychosocial intervention; and - Practitioner Participants. (f) are English-speaking. - Client Participants. a) 18+, - Client Participants. b) English-speaking, - Client Participants. c) have a diagnosis of unipolar depression per provider report, and - Client Participants. d) have a PHQ-9 score ≥ 10, which is above the clinical cutoff for depression symptoms.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Client Participants. (a) history or presence of psychiatric diagnoses other than unipolar, nonpsychotic depression or anxiety disorders, - Client Participants. (b) active suicidal ideation, - Client Participants. (c) current alcohol or substance abuse disorders, or - Client Participants. (d) have dementia - Client Participants. (e) all exclusion criteria cannot be confirmed via provider report. - Practitioner Participants. Exclusion criteria are those that do not meet the inclusion criteria listed above.

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Health Services Research
Masking
Single (Outcomes Assessor)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Active Comparator
Problem Solving Treatment as usual (PST as usual)
Participants in this arm will receiving training in PST as usual.
  • Behavioral: Problem Solving Treatment as usual (PST as usual)
    PST is a skills-based intervention that teaches clients a 7-step approach in which they 1) select a specific problem and define it in concrete terms,2) select a goal that is feasible to reach before next session, 3) brainstorm various ways to accomplish the goal, 4) evaluate pros and cons of each solution, including the likelihood they can actually implement it, 5) select the best solution, 6) create a plan to implement the solution, and 7) evaluate the plan afterward to ascertain the effectiveness of the solution. Practitioners teach and illustrate the PST process to clients at each session and encourage clients to implement action plans developed using the PST process. Clients are also encouraged to practice the PST process with additional problems between sessions, in order to gain mastery over the PST skills, enhance behavioral activation and as a result improve their belief in their ability to solve problems on their own (self efficacy).
Experimental
Problem Solving Treatment Aid (PST-Aid)
Participants in this arm will receiving training in PST with PST-Aid.
  • Behavioral: Problem Solving Treatment Aid (PST-Aid)
    PST-Aid is an internet-based tool to support the delivery of PST. PST-Aid incorporates decision support for the practitioner as well as client and provides PST treatment support functions (i.e., scaffolding), including patient problem lists and session worksheets. PST-Aid was designed to be used during remote sessions, such that practitioners and clients can interact throughout the session while collaboratively viewing and editing worksheets on their own browsers.This system was developed into a prototype that was piloted and found to be acceptable and with adequate usability.

Recruiting Locations

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
University of Washington

Study Contact

Helen Haile
206-616-2129
hghaile@uw.edu

Detailed Description

This study is a hybrid type III effectiveness-implementation randomized clinical trial comparing standard PST implementation with PST augmented by the PST-Aid implementation strategy. The study will test whether: 1. PST Aid results in improved implementation outcomes (initial and sustained fidelity, adoption, reach, and reduced reactive adaptations); 2. Changes in usability, engagement, and appropriateness mediate the effect of PST Aid on implementation outcomes; and 3. PST Aid is more effective in reducing client depressive symptoms and improving functioning.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.