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Improving Transitional Care Experiences in Mental Health

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Standard Treatment Versus Engagement Focused Treatment
Interventions
Behavioral: Standard Care
Behavioral: Engagement focused care
Registration Number
NCT02213198
Lead Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
Brief Summary

The cost of serious mental illness (SMI) in the U.S. is $317 billion annually. This translates to more than $1000 for every man, women, and child in the U.S. Hospitalization and Emergency Room (ER) visits have the highest costs. Outpatient services are overburdened. There is a push to get people out of hospitals quickly, while they are still quite ill. These factors cause patients to be lost in the transition from inpatient to outpatient care. Many individuals are repeatedly rehospitalized or continue to clog emergency rooms in an attempt to receive care. The importance of transitional care between inpatient/ER facilities and outpatient services to prevent this revolving door phenomenon has been continually stressed. There is little research on the best way to accomplish smooth transition to outpatient care. We developed a 90-day transitional care clinic (TCC) to address this need. We propose a randomized treatment outcome study comparing two transitional service packages within our TCC: a Standard Care package versus an Engagement-Focused package that features a novel intake procedure and a Shared Decision-Making intervention: Access Group is an intake procedure designed to address many of the problems of traditional approaches to post-acute treatment engagement, including failure of patients to reach intake appointments. Shared Decision-Making (SDM) is a structured approach to provider-patient communication that has been shown to increase patient involvement in care and improve outcomes. Despite SMI patients' desire to be more involved in their treatment decisions and promising early evidence of SDM's effectiveness in SMI, SDM has not been systematically evaluated in transitional psychiatric care. In the proposed study, patients referred to TCC will be randomized to either Engagement-focused Care or Standard Care. The relative benefit of these two approaches will be evaluated in 300 individuals who will be randomized to these two treatments in a 2:1 ratio. We hypothesize that attendance at appointments, reported satisfaction, shared decision making and quality of life will be higher for engagement focused care. The new treatment package is designed to get individuals into treatment quickly and to teach them how to be good consumers of mental health treatments going forward.

Detailed Description

Aim 1: To compare EFC to SC with respect to linkage to TCC services. Hypothesis A: Patients referred to EFC will exhibit a significantly greater rate of attendance at their TCC intake appointment than SC patients.

Aim 2: To compare EFC to SC with respect to patient participation in outpatient treatment.

Hypothesis B: Patients referred to EFC will report significantly greater shared decision-making in their TCC prescriber appointments than SC patients.

Hypothesis C: Patients referred to EFC will exhibit significantly greater attendance at post-intake scheduled TCC appointments than SC patients.

Hypothesis D: Patients referred to EFC will exhibit a significantly greater rate of attendance at initial post-TCC scheduled mental health appointments than SC patients.

Aim 3: To compare Engagement-focused Care (EFC) to Standard Care (SC) with respect to patients' long term quality of life.

Hypothesis E: Patients who receive EFC will exhibit significantly greater quality of life than SC patients six months after TCC termination.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
465
Inclusion Criteria
  • Serious mental illness including (schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, mood disorders, anxiety disorders), referral from inpatient psychiatric unit or emergency service at the time of discharge to the Transitional Care Clinic, ability to sign informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • Unable to complete assessments

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Standard CareStandard CareStandard Care includes individual intake appointments which are traditional in outpatient service and all services of the clinic including counseling, access to a prescriber, care coordination, and access to home visits.
Engagement Focused CareEngagement focused careEngagement Focused Care which includes all components of standard treatment plus both group Access intake process with its flexibility of scheduling and the SDM intervention
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Subjective Quality of Lifebaseline, 3 months and 6 months

The Quality of Life Interview (QOLI; 91) is a 45-minute structured interview that assesses quality of life in the domains of family, social relations, leisure activities, finances, legal/safety issues, work/school, and health. It is one of the most psychometrically sound QoL instruments for use in mental illness. The subjective scale assesses quality of life from the perspective of the patient. Subjective QOL = Mean of items 1,3,8,9,11,13,16,18,20,21 . Scores range from 1-7. Higher scores indicate better quality of life

Engagement in Treatment6 months

Whether patient kept appointment post TCC

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UTHSCSA

🇺🇸

San Antonio, Texas, United States

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