MedPath

Shared Decision Making for PTSD in Primary Care

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
PTSD
Interventions
Behavioral: Patient Readiness for Improvement through Motivation, Engagement, and Decision-making for PTSD
Registration Number
NCT04504149
Lead Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development
Brief Summary

PTSD is one of the most common mental health conditions affecting Veterans and is associated with significant burden. Highly effective treatments exist for PTSD, evidence-based psychotherapies, but very few Veterans receive them. Although VA has trained over 8,500 providers in evidence-based psychotherapies for PTSD over the past 10 years, only 6% of the 650,000 VHA patients with PTSD receive an evidence-based psychotherapy. It is critical to connect Veterans with the most effective PTSD treatments and done so in a way that is Veteran-centered. Shared decision making is a patient-centered approach to choosing healthcare treatment options. It has been shown to increase patients' motivation for treatment and ability to stay in treatment long enough to get benefit. It has also been shown to help providers align their practice with evidence-based guidelines. This proposal will refine and pilot test a shared decision making intervention for PTSD to be used in VA primary care clinics, where the vast majority of Veterans with PTSD are treated.

Detailed Description

Background: Over 1 million Veterans have PTSD and most (80% or more) do not receive first-line treatments, evidence-based psychotherapies, despite significant VA investment to increase access to these treatments. Clinicians often struggle to engage Veterans in evidence-based psychotherapies because they can be emotionally challenging treatments. Engagement could be catalyzed by mental health providers integrated into primary care (i.e., VA's Primary Care-Mental Health Integration, or PC-MHI) to maximize the reach of engagement efforts beyond specialty PTSD settings. Shared decision making, a process by which the patient and provider discuss treatment options, weigh benefits and risks, and select a treatment that meets the patient's needs, addresses known patient and provider barriers to evidence-based psychotherapies, including knowledge, self-efficacy, and trust. However, no study has examined shared decision making for PTSD in primary care. The proposal will address this knowledge gap by developing and refining a shared decision making intervention for PTSD, Patient Readiness for Improvement through Motivation, Engagement, and Decision-making (PRIMED), using input from Veterans with diverse perspectives, PC-MHI providers, and VA operational partners to optimize integration of shared decision making into clinical care. The investigators will collect acceptability and feasibility data to support an application for a future effectiveness-implementation trial.

Significance/Impact: Dr. Chen's proposed research addresses three HSR\&D and VA priorities: 1) increase engagement and retention of Veterans in evidence-based PTSD treatments, 2) advance health services research methods, specifically implementation science and user-centered design, which focuses on thorough integration of Veteran and frontline provider input, and 3) support suicide prevention efforts through effective treatment of PTSD, a major risk factor for suicide.

Innovation: The proposed project will promote significant change in current VA clinical practice. PC-MHI providers typically refer out patients with PTSD and defer discussions about treatment options to specialty providers. This proposal will help PC-MHI providers use a formal engagement strategy, shared decision making, to improve patients' knowledge of first-line PTSD treatments and to build motivation for care.

Specific Aims: 1) Refine PRIMED using user-centered design methods and diverse Veterans' perspectives, 2) Beta test PRIMED in one rural and one urban PC-MHI clinic to optimize integration into clinical workflow and achieve satisfactory acceptability and feasibility across a range of settings, 3) Conduct a small, randomized pilot trial (N=40) of PRIMED vs. usual care in two VA PC-MHI clinics to assess the feasibility of study procedures, which will inform a future larger trial.

Methodology: In Aim 1, Dr. Chen will conduct qualitative interviews using user-centered design methods with 25 VA PC-MHI patients with PTSD, oversampling women veterans and racial/ethnic minority veterans, to refine the PRIMED intervention protocol. In Aim 2, Dr. Chen will use rapid, iterative beta-testing with approximately 20 patients to optimize the acceptability and feasibility of delivering PRIMED in the clinical setting and its integration into clinical workflow across varied settings (small rural clinics and large urban clinics). In Aim 3, Dr. Chen will conduct a pilot randomized feasibility trial (N=40) to assess the feasibility of recruiting and randomizing Veterans and measuring treatment engagement and clinical outcomes.

Next Steps/Implementation: The research and training activities will prepare the nominee to conduct a multi-site, hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation trial to test the effectiveness of PRIMED for increasing receipt of first-line PTSD treatments and to begin to assess implementation barriers and facilitators. Future work to move this research into practice would involve collaborating with operational partners to improve VA SAIL performance measures in mental health, which are weighted to encourage evidence-based psychotherapies.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  • Adult VA patients 18 years who have a documented initial visit to Primary Care-Mental Health Integration for PTSD in the past 90 days at VA Puget Sound
Exclusion Criteria
  • Cognitive impairment (e.g., moderate or severe history of traumatic brain injury, dementia)
  • Unstable acute psychiatric conditions (e.g., current high-risk for suicide)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PRIMEDPatient Readiness for Improvement through Motivation, Engagement, and Decision-making for PTSDShared decision making session
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
CollaboRATE2 weeks

CollaboRATE is a a 3-item instrument developed for measuring patient-centeredness within SDM. Good patient acceptability will be defined as minimum ratings of 3 (some effort was made) on a 0 (no effort was made) to 4 (every effort was made) scale for every one of the 3 questionnaire items: 1) How much effort was made to help you understand your health issues?, 2) How much effort was made to listen to the things that matter most to you about your health issues?, 3) How much effort was made to include what matters most to you in choosing what to do next?

Utilization of evidence-based psychotherapies (EBPs) for PTSD6 months

The investigators will measure time to initiation, defined as days between the initial PC-MHI triage visit and first EBP session.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
PTSD Knowledge Questionnaire2 weeks

Knowledge about PTSD and its treatment will be assessed with a 43-item true-or-false questionnaire, which was used in a previous RCT of a paper-based PTSD decision aid. Items will rated as o (incorrect) or 1 (correct), with a total score ranging from 0-43. Higher scores indicate more accurate knowledge.

Decisional Conflict Scale2 weeks

The DCS is a 16-item scale that assesses patient-reported uncertainty around treatment decision-making. The items also assess the degree to which patients feel informed about risks and benefits, clear about their personal attitudes and values, supported by other(s), and effective in decision making. The items are rated from 0 (strongly agree) to 4 (strongly disagree), with a range from 0 to 64. Higher scores indicate better outcomes, i.e., more confidence and feeling more informed.

Perceived Stigma and Barriers to Care for Psychological Problems2 weeks

The investigators will use a 10-item version adapted for Veterans to assesses perceived barriers to mental health treatment related to access, stigma, and trust in providers. Higher scores indicate worse outcomes, i.e., more perceived stigma and barriers to care.

Generalized Self-Efficacy2 weeks

A 10-item scale that measures an individual's perceived ability to problem solve, follow through with decisions, and cope effectively with challenges. Items are rated from 0 (not at all true) to 4 (exactly true) and summed. Higher scores indicate better outcomes, i.e., greater confidence.

Wake Forest Physician Trust Scale2 weeks

A 10-item scale that measures patients' trust in their care providers. The scale total ranges from 10 to 50. Higher scores indicate more trust. Example questions include "Sometimes your doctor cares more about what is convenient for \[him or her\] than about your medical needs" and "Your doctor is totally honest in telling you about all of the different treatment options available for your condition." The language will be adapted so that "mental health provider" replaces "doctor" to clearly indicate to patients the relationship of interest.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

VA Puget Sound Health Care System Seattle Division, Seattle, WA

🇺🇸

Seattle, Washington, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath