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Feasibility and Outcomes of a Digital Health Support for the Schizophrenia Spectrum

Early Phase 1
Completed
Conditions
Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
Interventions
Combination Product: App4Independence
Registration Number
NCT03649815
Lead Sponsor
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Brief Summary

This protocol describes an attempt to capture the development phase of a mobile support for individuals with schizophrenia. The intent is to describe and account for a rigorous development process that will result in the creation of a beta version that would be tested in a randomized trial for effectiveness - to be addressed in a subsequent protocol

Detailed Description

General Issues The most common contributors to relapse in schizophrenia and associated mental illnesses are medication non-adherence, social isolation, and inadequate supports. Driven to a large extent by system of care shortcomings and the many challenges presented by symptoms, the impacts of these problems are profound from individual to system levels. This is a global issue, and to date technology has not been substantively leveraged in generating solutions - despite evidence of substantial uptake of relevant technologies by relevant populations. To date, there are few products on the market that address the constellation of issues outlined above. It is an area where a nuanced approach is needed as this illness is highly diverse in presentation, attended by a number of social determinants of health that greatly affect outcomes and, quite commonly, ambivalence with respect to service provider and caregiver engagement. This scenario as it exists for schizophrenia stands in sharp contrast with the many thousands of applications developed for other mental health issues.

Cellphone Based Technologies and Schizophrenia There is a small, emergent literature that is examining the feasibility and outcomes of mobile applications that address schizophrenia. Broadly, targeted mobile and online applications in areas such as cognitive remediation (brain training games) have been found feasible and do not result in any noted risks in their use and there have been promising findings in outcome studies of emergent mHealth strategies for schizophrenia of the kind tested here.

Local Work in this Area to Date

Initial mapping of key domains relevant to an app in this area has been conducted based upon the experience of the collaborators and an understanding of the relevant practice literatures. This initial draft, which might be considered a 'paper prototype', let to the identification of the following needs:

The platform would:

* Help prevent social isolation through personalized prompts, scheduling of activities, and connections to a range of resources relevant to social engagement

* Enhance hopeful and informed engagement in the recovery process through functions that foster resilience and draw upon evidence based strategies to enhance wellness (e.g., personalized affirmations; tip sheets; relaxation exercises)

* Facilitate automated support and link to caregivers

* Encourage and check-in on daily essential activities for patients - addressing memory, attention, and initiation challenges that often occur as a part of this illness

* Provide basic health/safety functionality and track level of wellness

Specifically, the app was designed to be made up of 4 functional areas:

1. A needs assessment in order to determine care/interaction pathway, crisis planning and routine builders, accompanied by ongoing assessment to keep components relevant and engaging and to facilitate treatment planning and support by providers.

2. Daily interactions and check-in functionality for self-determination of messaging, reward messaging, social interaction content.

3. An algorithm to determine content based on ambient and interaction data content triggers and risk flagging built on evidence-based guidelines.

4. Self-Management portal and caregiver dashboard.

Research Objective

This study was undertaken to engage in a rigorous process of feasibility testing. This will then be followed by a randomized trial of the beta version that will be generated through the process outlined in this protocol (will be the subject of a subsequent protocol and not addressed here). As such, the objective of this research is to capture and record the process of development of a functional, beta version of this technology. This test includes outcome data derived from 1 month of app use comprised of both qualitative feedback and quantitative outcome data. The objective is to determine feasibility prior to further trials and validation efforts.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
38
Inclusion Criteria
  • Are 18 years of age or older
  • Have a schizophrenia spectrum diagnosis
  • Own and regularly use a smart phone equipped with an Android operating system and a talk and data plan
  • Read and speak conversational English
Exclusion Criteria

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Use of mHealth TechnologyApp4IndependenceThis single arm of the study involves the provision of the mobile health technology entitled App4Independence.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Treatment Adherence1 month

Brief Adherence Rating Scale (BARS) was used to examine implications of A4i for medication use. A total score ranging from 0-100 is provided with 100 indicating better adherence.

Symptomatology1 Month

The Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) assesses the level of psychiatric symptomatology providing both total and subscale scores. All 53 items are 5-point likert with higher scores meaning higher symptomatology. For the overall score the total is used and can range from 0-212. Total scores from each of the 9 subscales are similarly used with higher scores meaning greater subscale symptomatology. Lowest scores for all are 0, with 20 the highest score for hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, psychoticism; 16 the highest score for interpersonal sensitivity; 24 the highest for obsessive compulsive, depression, anxiety; and 28 for somatization.

Recovery Process Engagement1 month

Personal Recovery Outcome Measure (PROM) was used to assess degree of engagement in the recovery process. The prom has 30 items, all 5 point likert with higher scores meaning more recovery engagement. The metric is the total score (0-120)/4 to provide an adjusted score. There are no subscales.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

🇨🇦

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

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