Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Not yet recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Alcohol Use Disorder
  • Anxiety Disorder
  • Depressive Disorder
  • Mental Disorder
  • Psychotic Disorders
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: This is a cluster randomized controlled trial with municipalities being the unit of randomization. 24 municipalities will be randomized to either RESHAPE or implementation as usual. Three health facilities in each municipality will participate in the study. All primary care providers with prescribing rights will be trained based on their municipality randomization arm.Masking: Triple (Participant, Care Provider, Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: There are two types of study participants: primary care providers and primary care patients. Based on the municipality of randomization, primary care providers will either participate in RESHAPE training or implementation as usual training. Patients will not be randomized because the health facilities they attend are already assigned to either having the primary care providers trained through RESHAPE or implementation as usual. The providers and patients will be masked to the implementation, i.e., they will not be given information on the differences in the two different implementation strategies. Research assistants and research psychiatrists who conduct the assessments will be masked to whether the provider or patients are in the RESHAPE or implementation-as-usual arms.Primary Purpose: Health Services Research

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 16 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

There continues to be a major gap between the global burden of persons with mental illness and the number of patients receiving adequate treatment. In the U.S. and other high-income countries, approximately 1 out of 5 persons receives minimally adequate care. In lower-middle income countries, it ran...

There continues to be a major gap between the global burden of persons with mental illness and the number of patients receiving adequate treatment. In the U.S. and other high-income countries, approximately 1 out of 5 persons receives minimally adequate care. In lower-middle income countries, it ranges from 1 out of 27 to 1 out of 100 persons. To address this gap in low- and middle-income countries, a key strategy has been the use of primary care health workers to detect and deliver of care for mental illness. The World Health Organization has developed the mental health Gap Action Programme to train primary care workers to detect mental illness and deliver evidence-supported treatment. However, research to date suggests that implementation strategies for mental health Gap Action Programme are inadequate as evidenced by low detection rates. In Nepal, fewer than half of persons with mental illness were correctly identified by mental health Gap Action Programme-trained primary care workers. A potential barrier to effective implementation of primary care detection is stigma among primary care workers against persons with mental illness. Our preliminary work suggests that reducing primary care workers' stigma against persons with mental illness may improve accurate detection of mental illness. A version of the mental health Gap Action Programme training that includes a stigma reduction component was developed: REducing Stigma among HealthcAre ProvidErs (RESHAPE). In RESHAPE, persons with mental illness (i.e., service users) are trained to share recovery stories, conduct myth-busting sessions, and promote mental health advocacy. A pilot cluster randomized controlled trial was conducted in Nepal comparing standard mental health Gap Action Programme training delivered psychiatrists and psychosocial specialists with a mental health Gap Action Programme training delivered by both specialists and service users (RESHAPE). Consistent with high-income country literature demonstrating that interaction with service users reduces stigma more effectively that only providing knowledge, stigma was lower among the RESHAPE- arm trained health workers. The pilot results also suggest that reducing stigma may improve detection of mental illness. Therefore, involvement of mental health service users in training primary care workers may reduce stigma, and that stigma reduction may mediate improved detection of mental illness. If these findings are confirmed in an appropriately powered cluster randomized controlled trial, this service user collaborative implementation strategy could make a major contribution to improving primary care detection in low- and middle-income countries, as well as in the U.S. A hybrid implementation-effectiveness (type-3) cluster randomized controlled trial will be in Nepal comparing mental health Gap Action Programme standard implementation with the RESHAPE implementation strategy. Our team of U.S. and Nepali researchers, in partnership with the Nepal Ministry of Health, demonstrated the feasibility of the cluster randomized controlled trial design and identified strategies for cost effectiveness modeling. Target conditions will be depressive disorder, psychotic disorders, and alcohol use disorder. Aim 1 - To evaluate the impact of the RESHAPE service user engagement on stigma among primary care workers. Hypothesis: Primary care workers in the RESHAPE arm will have less stigma toward persons with mental illness (measured with the Social Distance Scale) 3 months after training compared with primary care workers in the standard training. Aim 2 - To evaluate the impact of the RESHAPE training on accuracy (sensitivity and specificity) of detection, as measured by the proportion of true positive and true negative diagnoses among patients presenting to primary care facilities, as confirmed by a psychiatrist's structured clinical interview; and to evaluate stigma as a mediator of differences in accuracy. Hypothesis: Primary care workers in the RESHAPE arm will have greater accuracy of detecting mental illness. Secondary analyses: implementation arm differences in patient quality adjusted life years and cost utility will be evaluated.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04282915
Collaborators
  • Duke University
  • Transcultural Psychosocial Organisation
  • King's College London
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Brandon A Kohrt, MD, PhD George Washington University