Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Depression
  • Psychological Distress
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: Non-RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: This is a non-randomized controlled trial comparing training and supervision as usual with training and supervision using a competency-based approach.Masking: Triple (Participant, Care Provider, Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: Trainees and their patients will not be told which arm the trainee was in. Outcome assessors will also be blinded to arm.Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 10 years and 125 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

There is increasing evidence that non-specialist or minimally trained mental health providers can effectively provide support and deliver psychosocial support and low-intensity psychological interventions for common mental disorders and substance use disorders in low resource settings. Psychological...

There is increasing evidence that non-specialist or minimally trained mental health providers can effectively provide support and deliver psychosocial support and low-intensity psychological interventions for common mental disorders and substance use disorders in low resource settings. Psychological treatments delivered by non-specialists in low-resource settings have effectiveness comparable to high-income country studies of specialist interventions. Low intensity interventions refer to interventions that do not rely on specialists and are modified, brief evidence-based therapies including guide self-help and e-mental health. The World Health Organization identifies such interventions as being: brief, basic, non-specialist-delivered versions of existing evidence-based psychological treatments (e.g., basic versions of cognitive-behavioral therapy, interpersonal therapy); and may include self-help materials (e.g., self-help books, audiovisual materials, and online or app-based self-help interventions); individual or group programs, and designed to be age-appropriate (i.e., delivered differently for children and adults). Moreover, low intensity interventions are particularly well suited to communities affected by adversity, as they use fewer resources which make them more scalable. Psychosocial refers to interventions that are designed to address the psychological effects of conflict [or adversity], including the effects on behavior, emotion, thoughts, memory and functioning, and social effects, including changes in relationships, social support and economic status. The term psychosocial emphasizes, the close connection between psychological aspects of experience and wider social aspects of experience, inclusive of human capacity, social ecology, and culture and values. For the purpose of this study, low intensity psychological and psychosocial interventions were selected using the criteria above, and ensuring the interventions are freely accessible to the public. To assure success of such interventions outside the context of resource-intensive research trials, it is crucial to develop training and supervision programs that produce competent providers of psychological and psychosocial support interventions. A necessary element to achieve this goal is development of standardized tools and procedures to assess the competency of those trained to deliver them; while ensuring competency assessment results are easily understandable to trainers and supervisors so that they can remediate areas of low competency. In the context of psychological and psychosocial interventions, competency refers the extent to which a therapist [including non-specialists] has the knowledge and skill required to deliver a treatment to the standard needed for it to achieve its expected effects. Competency is typically assessed through structured role-plays in which trained standardized [mock] clients elicit trainee's ability to perform the key skills of an intervention. Role-plays such as this are commonly used in health professional training and evaluation in the form of observed structured clinical evaluations with simulated patients. The Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support initiative was developed out of need to have easily implementable competency evaluation tools and remediation training materials that can be used with specialists and non-specialists in diverse global settings. To supplement the platform, Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support will also include various implementation, trainer and training resources and guidance. The need for these competency assessment tools and training materials was identified in May 2018, during a Theory of Change Workshop conducted by the World Health Organization Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support team with frontline psychological service practitioners, clinicians, non-governmental organization training and supervision staff, and researchers. The four key elements of the platform will be (a) competency tools for evaluation of non-specific (core competencies or common factors) and specific practice elements (or treatment specific factors); (b) role-play vignettes for conducting competency evaluations; (c) instructional materials on how to conduct competency evaluations (training standardized clients, establishing inter-rater reliability when conducting competency evaluations, using rating tools, interpreting results); and (d) instructional materials on how to integrate competency evaluations into trainings and supervision (giving feedback to participants, modifying training programs, feedback to trainers and supervisors) including core competency training and remediation materials. Study Goals and Objectives: The goal of the study is to inform development of the Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support platform and its tools, ensuring feasibility, acceptability, utility, reliability, and validity to support the provision of quality psychological support. Study Objectives Determine the feasibility, acceptability, and perceived utility, of the Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support platform to facilitate assessment of competency and employ competency assessment results and remediation training materials to support training and supervision of non-specialists on low-intensity psychological interventions. Evaluate the reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change of Ensuring Quality in Psychological Support competency assessment tools based on inter-rater reliability of the tools within and between sites, ability to detect changes in competency over the course of training and supervision, and association with trainer ratings, as well as service delivery metrics and client outcomes across different psychological interventions and implementation sites.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04704362
Collaborators
  • War Child Holland
  • World Health Organization
  • The Center for Victims of Torture, United States
  • University of Washington
  • University of Nairobi
  • Socios En Salud Sucursal, Peru
  • University of South Florida
  • HealthRight International
  • Johns Hopkins University
  • Centre for Infectious Disease Research in Zambia
  • The University of New South Wales
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Alison Schafer, PhD World Health Organization