MedPath

Implementing and Sustaining a Sleep Treatment to Improve Community Mental Part 1: Implementation Health Outcomes

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Circadian Dysregulation
Sleep Disorder
Interventions
Behavioral: Adapted Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C)
Behavioral: Standard Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C)
Other: Usual Care Delayed Treatment
Registration Number
NCT04154631
Lead Sponsor
University of California, Berkeley
Brief Summary

The sleep disturbance commonly experienced by individuals with a severe mental illness (SMI) reduces these individuals' capacity to function and contributes to key symptoms. This study will test the effects of a sleep treatment that has been adapted using theory, data and stakeholder inputs to improve the fit for SMI patients treated in community mental health centers (CMHCs), relative to the standard treatment. The investigators will also determine if the adapted and standard versions can improve sleep, improve functioning and reduce symptoms.

Detailed Description

An obstacle to the roll-out of evidence-based psychological treatments (EBPTs) for severe mental illness (SMI) is that the context for the implementation typically differs from the original testing context causing a lack of "fit" between the setting and the EBPT. The investigators propose to evaluate if adapting a specific treatment to improve the contextual fit improves outcomes in a setting that typifies this challenge-community mental health centers (CMHCs).

Following the Experimental Therapeutics Approach, the target is sleep and circadian dysfunction. In SMI, sleep and circadian dysfunction undermines affect regulation, cognitive function and physical health, predicts the onset and worsening of symptoms and is often chronic even with evidence-based SMI treatment. Prior treatment studies have been disorder-focused-they have treated a specific sleep problem (e.g., insomnia) in a specific diagnostic group (e.g., depression). However, real-life sleep and circadian problems are not so neatly categorized, particularly in SMI. Hence, the investigators developed the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C) to treat a wide range of sleep and circadian problems experienced in SMI.

With NIMH support, including a study in CMHCs, the investigators established that TranS-C engages the target. Yet gaps remain: 1) Thus far, the TranS-C providers have been employed, trained and supervised by the university. The investigators will determine if TranS-C can be effectively delivered by providers within CMHCs. 2) The investigators will test a version of TranS-C that has been adapted to improve the fit and to address potential barriers to scaling TranS-C. The rigorous adaptation process used theory, data and stakeholder inputs. 3) The investigators will study ad hoc adaptations made by providers to TranS-C. 4) The investigators include a Sustainment Phase (1 year), responding to urgent calls to study the sustainability of EBPTs.

This entry describes the Implementation Phase, the first of a three-phase hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation trial. In this phase, implementation and effectiveness outcomes of two versions of TranS-C (Standard and Adapted) are compared with CMHC providers who are trained by treatment experts.

Guided by the Replicating Effective Programs (REP) framework, at least 8 CMHC clinic sites will be cluster randomized to either Standard or Adapted TranS-C. Then, within each CMHC site, patients will be randomized to immediate TranS-C or to Usual Care followed by Delayed Treatment (UC-DT). A total of 96 providers and 576 patients. Patients will be assessed pre, mid and post-treatment and at 6 months follow-up. UC Berkeley will co-ordinate the research, facilitate implementation, collect data etc. Providers within an established network of CMHCs will implement TranS-C. SA1 is to confirm that both Standard vs. Adapted TranS-C, compared to UC-DT, improve sleep and circadian functioning and reduce functional impairment and disorder-focused psychiatric symptoms. SA2 is to evaluate the fit, to the CMHC context, of Standard vs. Adapted TranS-C via provider ratings of acceptability, appropriateness and feasibility. SA3 will examine if better fit, operationalized via provider ratings of acceptability, mediates the relationship between treatment condition and patient outcome. This research will determine if sleep and circadian problems can be effectively addressed in SMI in CMHC settings, test two variations of TranS-C that each have unique advantages and focus on community providers and typical community patients.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
459
Inclusion Criteria

The inclusion criteria for CMHCs are:

  • Publicly funded adult mental health outpatient services
  • Support from CMHC leadership

The inclusion criteria for CMHC providers are:

  • Employed or able to deliver client-facing services to CMHC clients
  • Interest in learning and delivering TranS-C
  • Volunteer to participate and formally consent to participate

Consumers must meet the following inclusion criteria:

  • Aged 18 years and older
  • Meet criteria for an SMI per self-report and confirmed by referring provider or administration of the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) (DSM-5, Version 7.0.0) by a licensed clinical social worker on the research team
  • Exhibit a sleep or circadian disturbance as determined by endorsing 4 "quite a bit" or 5 "very much" (or the equivalent for reverse scored items) on one or more PROMIS-SD questions
  • Receiving the standard of care for the SMI and consent to regular communications between the research team and provider
  • Consent to access their medical record and participate in assessments
  • Guaranteed place to sleep for at least 2 months that is not a shelter
Exclusion Criteria
  • Presence of an active and progressive physical illness or neurological degenerative disease directly related to the onset and course of the sleep and circadian dysfunction, or making participation in the study unfeasible based on confirmation from the treating clinician and/or medical record
  • Presence of substance abuse/dependence only if it makes participation in the study unfeasible
  • Current active intent or plan to commit suicide (those with suicidal ideation are eligible) only if it makes participation in the study unfeasible, or homicide risk
  • Night shift work >2 nights per week in the past 3 months
  • Pregnancy or breast-feeding

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Adapted TranS-CAdapted Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C)The process for developing Adapted TranS-C has been iterative and grounded in theory, data and stakeholder feedback. The core elements of the evidence-based theory of change underpinning TranS-C have been retained. Adapted TranS-C is delivered in four 20-minute, weekly, individual sessions.
Standard TranS-CStandard Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C)Standard TranS-C is modularized and delivered across eight 50-minute, weekly, individual sessions. It is comprised of 4 cross-cutting interventions featured in every session; 4 core modules that apply to the vast majority of patients; and 7 optional modules used less commonly, depending on the presentation.
UC-DTUsual Care Delayed TreatmentUsual Care Delayed Treatment. Usual care in the partner CMHCs starts with a case manager who co-ordinates care and refers each client for a medication review and to various rehabilitation programs (e.g., health care, housing, nutrition, finding a job, peer monitoring).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Provider-level outcome: Acceptability Intervention MeasureChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment for each client, and to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment.

Assesses provider perceptions of the appropriateness of the treatment intervention using a self-report questionnaire and provider feedback.

Patient-level outcome: Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Sleep DisturbanceChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment, to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Assesses perceived functional impairments related to sleep problems using a self-report questionnaire. The minimum value is 8. The maximum value is 40. Higher scores mean more sleep disturbance (worse outcome).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient-level outcome: Midpoint of Sleep MeasureChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment, to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Assesses circadian functioning by calculating the midpoint between falling asleep time and rise time.

Provider-level outcome: Intervention Appropriateness MeasureChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment for each client, and to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment.

Assesses provider perceptions of the appropriateness of the treatment intervention using a self-report questionnaire

Patient-level outcome: The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Cross-Cutting Symptom MeasureChange from baseline to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Assesses disorder-focused psychiatric symptoms using a self-report questionnaire. Each item on the measure is rated on a 5-point scale (from 0-4), where higher scores indicate a higher frequency of psychiatric symptoms (worse outcome).

Patient-level outcome: Composite Sleep Health ScoreChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment, to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Composite Sleep Health Score which is defined as the sum of scores on 6 sleep health dimensions: Regularity (Midpoint fluctuation), Satisfaction (Sleep quality question on PROMIS-SD), Alertness (Daytime sleepiness question on PROMIS-SRI), Timing (Mean midpoint), Efficiency (Sleep efficiency) and Duration (Total Sleep Time).

Patient-level outcome: Sheehan Disability ScaleChange from baseline to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Assesses functional impairment on a scale from 0 to 30, where higher scores mean higher impairment.

Patient-level outcome: Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Sleep Related ImpairmentChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment, to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and to 6-month follow-up.

Assesses perceived functional impairments related to sleep problems in a self-report questionnaire. The minimum value is 16. The maximum value is 80. Higher scores mean more sleep related problems (worse outcome).

Provider-level outcome: Feasibility of Intervention MeasureChange from baseline, to mid-treatment, which is 2 or 4 weeks after the beginning of treatment for each client, and to post-treatment, which is 6 or 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment.

Assesses provider perceptions of the feasibility of the intervention using a self-report questionnaire.

Trial Locations

Locations (10)

Alameda County Behavioral Health Care Services

🇺🇸

Oakland, California, United States

Lake County Behavioral Health Services

🇺🇸

Lucerne, California, United States

Monterey County Behavioral Health

🇺🇸

Salinas, California, United States

Bay Area Community Health

🇺🇸

San Jose, California, United States

County of Santa Cruz Behavioral Health Services for Children and Adults

🇺🇸

Santa Cruz, California, United States

Kings County Behavioral Health

🇺🇸

Hanford, California, United States

Santa Barbara County Department of Behavioral Wellness

🇺🇸

Goleta, California, United States

Placer County Health and Human Services, Adult System of Care

🇺🇸

Roseville, California, United States

Contra Costa Health, Housing, and Homeless Services Division

🇺🇸

Concord, California, United States

Solano County Department of Health & Social Services, Behavioral Health Services

🇺🇸

Fairfield, California, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath