Optimizing the Resources of Psychotherapy as a Tool for Implementing the Mental Health Reform
- Conditions
- Psychotherapy Research and Outcome Measures
- Interventions
- Other: Supervision assissted by measures
- Registration Number
- NCT04017676
- Lead Sponsor
- Shalvata Mental Health Center
- Brief Summary
Psychotherapy is one of the cornerstones in public and private mental health services. Despite the tremendous investment in psychotherapy, its efficiency ranges from 40% to 60%. Given the Mental health Reform (2015), aimed at increasing the quality, availability, and accessibility of mental health services, there is an urgent need to manage and maximize psychotherapy services in Israel.
- Detailed Description
Objectives: To examine the feasibility of implementing managing (monitor and interventional) procedures in psychotherapy services conducted in public mental health services, to assess their effect on the outcome, and to estimate their impact on the 2015 Mental Health Reform objectives.
Working hypotheses:
* After appropriate preparation, managed psychotherapeutic service will be implemented in 4 public mental health out-patients clinics;
* Managed psychotherapeutic service will lead to an improvement in the outcome of psychotherapy;
* Managed psychotherapeutic service will increase the efficacy of mental health services.
Methods:
Type of study: A multicenter, randomized, controlled study with a group comparison and a program trial, in which the subjects are recruited according to a systematic allocation by order.
Since in the field of psychotherapy, "measure means affect," there is a built-in difficulty in building control groups (which are also committed to evaluation). For this reason, the proposed study combines a control group comparison.
Research population: The study will be carried out in the therapeutic settings of two psychiatric hospitals: the Shalvata Mental Health Center and the Geha Mental Health Center. The study population will include patients receiving therapeutic services in the ambulatory system of these centers (three clinics, the Shalvata Mental Health Center, one clinic, the Geha Mental Health Center). The study population includes patients with all the common mental disorders (adjustment disorders, anxiety, depression, personality disorders and somatomorphic disorders). The allocation between caregivers will be random in order, in a one-to-one ratio.
Research groups: The proposed study has two groups. Both groups include patients who are actively receiving psychotherapy on a weekly basis for at least three months to neutralize the effects of starting treatment. The first group will be under the usual treatment conditions (TAU); The second group will be exposed to a multidisciplinary therapeutic program that has a monitoring component and after two months an intervening component will be. In order to reduce the effect of the treated variables and the analysis of nested data, each therapist will introduce two patients into the study: one patient will be in the normal treatment condition (TAU) and the other under the monitoring and intervention program. In order to ensure randomization in this allocation, the clinic manager will determine the identity of the patients (i.e., each therapist will recruit two patients, and the allocation decision will be made anonymously by the clinic manager).
Inclusion criteria: Included are patients over the age of 18 years who have agreed to participate in the study, were found suitable for psychotherapeutic treatment and are treated with the attending clinician for at least two months. Patients who (due to cognitive impairment, language gaps, etc.) are not able to complete questionnaires with little help will not be included in the study. In order to minimize the effect of external variables, patients who, in the opinion of the clinician, are expected to undergo significant pharmacological changes (change in non-sleeping drugs or occasional sedatives) will not be inclusesd Population of caregivers: Experienced therapists from various therapeutic professions (including psychologists, social workers, psychiatrists, and other therapists who are graduates of psychotherapy training programs) will participate in the study. Only therapist who have a proven experience of at least 6 months in the clinic and manage at least four treatments at the beginning of the study will participate.
Data collection: Data collection will be carried out through computerized information systems (computerized medical records, by an application on a cellular device currently being developed as part of the project).
Research tools and variables: The primary outcome measure of the study is the OQ-45 (Lambert, M. J., Gregersen, A.T., Burlingame, G.M. (2004). The Outcome Questionnaire-45 The use of psychological testing for treatment planning and outcomes assessment: Volume 3: Instruments for adults (3rd ed) (pp. 191-234). Mahwah, NJ, US: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers).
Methods of data analysis: Differences between groups will be examined using chi-squared tests (in categorical variables) or by independent T-tests and Mann-Whitney tests (non-categorical variables). Time differences will be analyzed by ANCOVA (repeated measures) and TSA (time series analysis). The sample size estimation is 68 patients.
Importance: Managed psychotherapeutic service has the potential to improve the clinical outcomes, and to increase the efficiency of the mental health services following the goals of the 2015 Mental Health Reform.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- UNKNOWN
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 80
Included are patients over the age of 18 years who have agreed to participate in the study, were found suitable for psychotherapeutic treatment and are treated with the attending clinician for at least two months.
Patients who (due to cognitive impairment, language gaps, etc.) are not able to complete questionnaires with little help will not be included in the study. In order to minimize the effect of external variables, patients who, in the opinion of the clinician, are expected to undergo significant pharmacological changes (change in non-sleeping drugs or occasional sedatives) will not be included
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Experimental group Supervision assissted by measures The second group will be exposed to a multidisciplinary therapeutic program that has a monitoring component and after two months an intervening component will be.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in OQ45 Initiation, Week 4, Week 7, Week 20 The primary outcome measure of the study is the OQ-45 (Lambert, M. J., Gregersen, A.T., Burlingame, G.M. (2004). The Outcome Questionnaire-45 The use of psychological testing for treatment planning and outcomes assessment: Volume 3: Instruments for adults (3rd ed) (pp. 191-234). Mahwah, NJ, US: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Publishers).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method