A Trial of Online LGBTQ-affirmative Cognitive Behavioral Therapy to Reduce Depression and Associated Health Risks Among Young Adults
- Conditions
- LGBTQSexual Behavior
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Online EQuIPBehavioral: Self-monitoring control
- Registration Number
- NCT04408469
- Lead Sponsor
- Yale University
- Brief Summary
This study is to test the efficacy of an online CBT intervention (EQuIP) that addresses the pathways through which minority stress compromises LGBTQ young adults' co-occurring mental (e.g., depression) and behavioral (e.g., substance use, condomless anal sex) health problems. This purpose of this study is to determine if the treatment is efficacious when delivered online and if its efficacy exceeds that of the self-monitoring control.
- Detailed Description
To evaluate the preliminary efficacy of an LGBTQ-affirmative online CBT treatment and whether such an LGBTQ-affirmative focus adds benefit, a 2-arm RCT that would examine (1) whether online EQuIP demonstrates significant mental health improvements compared to self-monitoring of stress and mood, and (2) whether participant baseline LGBTQ-specific stress exposure moderates treatment efficacy, such that participants with the most LGBTQ-specific stress exposure benefit more from online EQuIP than self-monitoring of stress and mood.
The primary outcomes are depressive symptoms, anxiety symptoms, substance abuse, sexual risk behavior, and suicidality, all of which disproportionally affect LGBTQ young adults. Secondary outcomes include hypothesized cognitive, affective, and behavioral minority stress mechanisms, such as internalized homophobia, rejection sensitivity, concealment, social isolation, and emotional dysregulation.
Participants will be randomized to either self-monitoring control or Online EQuIP group.
Self-monitoring control: In this control condition, participants will be asked to indicate their past 7-day mood; stress experiences; and mental and behavioral health on an online survey. This type of self-monitoring has been shown to yield improvement in behavioral health outcomes. Self-reporting LGBTQ stress experiences has also been shown to produce reductions in depression symptoms over time. Participants will record these experiences once per week for 10 weeks.
Online EQuIP: This online CBT treatment consists of 10 weekly modules that participants will complete over the course of 10 weeks. Modules contain weekly psychoeducational text and vignettes about minority stress and mental health; brief videos illustrating the CBT skills; and homework exercises that therapists review and provide feedback on. Homework exercises include weekly tracking of stressful situations and mood, practicing new skills (e.g., mindfulness, cognitive restructuring), and exercises related to considering the origins of stress and negative emotions that participants may be experiencing. Therapists provide feedback after each homework assignment, including reviewing each participant's treatment goals as part of the first session's homework. Therapists who support this condition will be instructed to incorporate LGBTQ-specific content and feedback into homework reviews. Therapists will either be postdoctoral fellows in the Pachankis lab or clinical/counseling psychology interns/externs in the Pachankis lab who possess an advanced degree in a mental health field with significant prior experience treating LGBTQ young adults with mental health concerns. Modules were adapted directly from the in-person materials (e.g., therapist manual, participant handouts) used in our previously successful trials of this treatment. A team of six therapists and supervisors of the original in-person treatment adapted the text for the online modules, including realistic vignettes and easy-to-follow skills training. A video production company created accompanying videos with our clinical team's close input.
In preparation for this RCT, the online EQuIP treatment was delivered to 14 LGBTQ young adults who meet all eligibility criteria for the full trial. The purpose of this initial test was to ensure acceptability of the treatment content and usability of the technical platform.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 120
- identify as lesbian, bisexual, gay, or another sexual minority identity (e.g., pansexual, demisexual)
- past-week symptoms of depression or anxiety using the Brief Symptom Inventory-4 cutoff of 2.5 on either the depression subscale or anxiety subscale
- weekly access to internet on a laptop, desktop, or tablet device
- ability to read, write, and speak in English
- provision of informed consent.
- current active suicidality or homicidality (defined as active intent or concrete plan, as opposed to passive suicidal ideation)
- evidence of active untreated mania, psychosis, or gross cognitive impairment - current enrollment in an intervention study
- current enrollment in intensive mental health treatment (i.e., receiving mental health treatment more than once per month or 8 or more sessions of CBT within the past year.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Online EQuIP Online EQuIP The online CBT treatment consists of 10 weekly modules that participants will complete over the course of 10 weeks. Self-Monitoring Self-monitoring control Participants will be asked to indicate their past 7-day mood; stress experiences; and mental and behavioral health on an online survey experience once per week for 10 weeks
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of Participants Reporting Any Alcohol Use Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Alcohol use in participants will be assessed using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification (AUDIT) instrument. Any alcohol use over the past 3 months will be measured through the first item of the instrument ("How often, during the last 3 months did you have a drink containing alcohol?") with the creation of a binary variable (1 = any alcohol use, 0 = no alcohol use).
Change in Distress Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Distress will be measured using the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI). The BSI is an 18 item measure that uses a 0-4 rating scale for each item. An overall score of 72 would be the highest possible score on the measure and would indicate an extreme level of overall distress.
Change in Depression Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Depression will be measured using the Center for Epidemiological Studies -- Depression Scale (CESD). This 20-item measure uses a 0-3 rating (Rarely or none of the time - Most or all of the time) scale and sums across the items with items 3, 11, 14, and 16 reversed. for a minimum score of 0 and a maximum score of 60. Higher scores indicate greater severity of depression. In cases with internally missing data (items not answered), the sums are computed after imputation of the missing values: # items on scale / # actually answered, multiplied by the sum obtained from the answered items. A higher score indicates more depressive symptomatology during the past week.
Change in Depression Severity Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Depression severity will be measured using the Overall Depression Severity \& Impairment Scale (ODSIS). This 5 item measure uses a 0-4 rating scale and sums across the items for a maximum score of 20. The higher the score, the greater the severity of depression.
Number of Participants Reporting Any Sexual Risk Behavior Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Sexual risk behavior is defined as: condomless anal or vaginal/frontal sex \[not counting the sole use of prosthetics\] in the absence of PrEP, with any HIV+ partner \[except primary HIV+ partners with a known undetectable viral load\] or status-unknown partner. A binary variable of any sexual risk behavior was constructed from reports of past-90 day sexual behavior (1 = any sexual risk behavior, 0 = no sexual risk behavior).
Change in Anxiety Symptoms Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Anxiety symptoms will be measured by the Overall Anxiety Severity \& Impairment Scale (OASIS). This 5 item measure uses a 0-4 rating scale and sums across the items for a maximum score of 20. The higher the score, the greater the presence of anxiety symptoms.
Number of Participants Reporting Any Suicidal Ideation Baseline, 4 months, 8 months Suicidal ideation will be measured using the Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS). Any suicidal ideation was assessed through the first item of this scale ("In the past month, how often have you had thoughts about suicide?") with the creation of a binary variable (1 = any suicidal ideation, 0 = no suicidal ideation).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Dr. Pachankis' Lab
🇺🇸New York, New York, United States