Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • COVID-19
  • Depression
  • Mental Health Issue
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: Non-RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Participants selected for the e-psychotherapy group will receive a 9-week program that includes a combination of CBT, mindfulness, and problem-based therapy, in addition to TAU. The control group will receive treatment as usual during the first 9 weeks; if they still present significant symptoms (less than 50% response to treatment from baseline), they will be offered the e-psychotherapy program.Masking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 65 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Participants: Participants (n=80) aged 18-65 years will be recruited from referrals within the outpatient clinics of HDH and PCH. Participants who consent to take part in the study will be evaluated by one of the psychiatrists on the team through a video appointment. Diagnosis of MDD and/or GAD will...

Participants: Participants (n=80) aged 18-65 years will be recruited from referrals within the outpatient clinics of HDH and PCH. Participants who consent to take part in the study will be evaluated by one of the psychiatrists on the team through a video appointment. Diagnosis of MDD and/or GAD will be confirmed using the DSM-5 and approved through the M.I.N.I. The inclusion criteria for the study will include the capacity to consent; a diagnosis of MDD and/or GAD, the ability to speak and read English, and having consistent and reliable access to the internet. Exclusion criteria include active psychosis, acute mania, severe alcohol or substance use disorder, and/or active suicidal or homicidal ideation. If a participant is receiving another form of psychotherapy, they will also be excluded from the study. If eligible for the study, participants will be randomly assigned to either the electronic psychotherapy (e-psychotherapy) or control (i.e. Treatment as usual (TAU)) group, stratified by sex, age group, and gender. Participants selected for the e-psychotherapy group will receive a 9-week program that includes a combination of CBT, mindfulness, and problem-based therapy, in addition to TAU. The content of the e-psychotherapy program will be customized to reflect the challenges that individuals face through the COVID-19 pandemic and will be developed into interactive and engaging therapy modules. All online sessions and interactions will occur through Online Psychotherapy Tool (OPTT), a secure online platform. Through OPTT, all participants will be assigned to a team of psychiatrists and social workers (SWs). The SW working with each patient will assign a pre-designed therapy module to that patient on a specific day of the week through OPTT. Participants will then be able to access the therapy content at any time throughout the week. Each weekly module will highlight a different topic and include general information, an overview of skills, and homework that is to be completed by a specific day that week. Completing each weekly module requires an average time commitment of 40-minutes, which can be completed at once or in blocks of time. This homework will be directly submitted through OPTT to the clinician who will then provide personalized feedback to the patient. To ensure a consistent high-quality outcome, SWs will use pre-designed session-specific feedback templates to respond to each weekly patient submission. Each patient's care team will be able to securely communicate through OPTT to make decisions regarding each patient's care path. The control group will receive treatment as usual during the first 9 weeks; if they still present significant symptoms (less than 50% response to treatment from baseline), they will be offered the e-psychotherapy program. Module Content: The first 3 sessions will be designed to address the symptoms caused by fear of illness or concerns about personal safety in the context of a pandemic. Electronic-CBT (e-CBT) modules will focus on problem-solving techniques, with mindfulness practices included, to help build healthy coping skills to address the uncertainties surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic. e-CBT modules will involve guiding participants to develop constructive and balanced coping strategies through 5 focuses: stimulus control, cognitive therapy, sleep hygiene, relaxation therapy, and sleep restriction. Additional focus will be placed on the connection between thoughts, behaviours, emotions, physical reaction and one's environment. Training: Through training, all SWs will learn the standard care pathway, the aim, and the content of each therapeutic session. Moreover, they will be provided sample homework from a patient and asked to provide feedback. Feedback templates will vary from session to session and SWs will personalize each template for each patients' homework. Training will occur through webinars and exercises with feedback. Outcome Evaluation: Primary outcomes measured will be stress level changes based on the DASS-21, resilience based on RS-14, and quality of life-based on Q-LES-Q. Additional measurements will be made based on participant diagnosis (PHQ9, MADRS, GAD7). All questionnaires will be collected directly through OPTT at baseline, session 6, after the final session, and at a 6-month follow up. Healthcare providers will be asked about the feasibility of providing the e-psychotherapy, how it compared to in-person psychotherapy with respect to time commitment, feelings of 'connectedness' to the participant, and any perceived benefits/drawbacks to e-psychotherapy. From focus groups, factors related to personal, social, and cultural factors (gender, sexuality, background, supportive resources, structural/social barriers, etc.) will be extracted using an Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) approach. Ethics and Data Privacy: All procedures have been submitted for approval of ethical compliance to the Queen's University Health Sciences and Affiliated Teaching Hospitals Research Ethics Board. Only the care providers involved in the care of the participant will have access to their chart. Patients will only be identifiable by an ID number on the OPTT platform and their real identity and consent forms will be stored locally in a locked file cabinet and destroyed 5 years after the study completion date. Only anonymized data will be provided to the analysis team members. OPTT is HIPAA, PIPEDA and SOC-2 compliant and all servers and databases are hosted in AWS Canada cloud infrastructure which is managed by Medstack to assure all provincial and federal privacy and security regulations are met. OPTT will not collect any identifiable personal information or IP addresses for privacy purposes. OPTT will only collect anonymized metadata to improve its service quality and provide advanced analytics to the clinician team. All data is encrypted by OPTT and no employee has direct access to patient data. All encrypted backups are kept in the S3 storage that is dedicated to Queen's University. Data Analysis: Repeated MANOVA will be used to evaluate treatment efficacy in changes in scores on the DASS-21, RS-14 & Q-LES-Q between the participant groups (TAU, anxiety, and depression), and changes within each specific diagnosis at four different time points. Thematic analysis will be applied to analyze survey questions in order to better capture experiences, acceptability and patient-centeredness of e-psychotherapy. Descriptive analysis of time spent by each care team member for individual participants to evaluate the cost efficiency of care delivery will occur.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04476667
Collaborators
Online PsychoTherapy Clinic
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Nazanin Alavi Queen's University