Collaborative Redesign of Implementation Strategies for the Brief Intervention for School Clinicians
- Conditions
- Mental Health IssueAnxiety DisordersDepressive Symptoms
- Registration Number
- NCT06968949
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Washington
- Brief Summary
Schools are the most common venue for youth mental health services, but school mental health (SMH) typically does not use evidence-based clinical interventions (CI), common elements of effective mental health, or effective implementation strategies. To address this gap, a multidisciplinary team developed the Brief Intervention for School Clinicians (BRISC), a four-session engagement, brief intervention, and triage strategy targeting a range of mental health (e.g., anxiety, depression, past trauma) and other problems (academic, peer, family). BRISC outperformed SMH usual care on engagement, treatment completion, and youth self-reported problem severity. Although there are many evidence-based SMH strategies such as BRISC, integration into practice is poor because accompanying implementation strategies are often absent, poorly defined, or insufficiently tailored to the education context.
- Detailed Description
The investigators will evaluate the impact of original BRISC (BR-O) implementation versus adapted BRISC (BR-A) implementation for students referred to SMH on mental health outcomes (i.e., student top problems, anxiety, depression, mental health functioning). The investigators hypothesize:
H-1: In both BR-O and BR-A, more students will experience clinical improvement on mental health outcomes (i.e., top problems, anxiety, depression, mental health functioning) than deteriorate or remain unchanged.
H-2: BR-A will demonstrate noninferiority to BR-O on mental health outcomes.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 60
- Clinician participants: Counselors will be included if they (a) provide school-based services; (b) have not previously received formal training in BRISC; and (c) are not actively receiving support to implement another intervention.
- Youth participants: Students must meet eligibility criteria for BRISC including (a) being in grades 9-12 and 13 years or older (b) receiving school mental health services
- Anyone not meeting inclusion criteria.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 scale (GAD-7) is a brief scale that queries about anxiety symptoms. Normative data for the GAD-7 included a large sample of adolescents aged 14-25 years (n = 634) that concluded the measure demonstrated age invariance, reliability, and internal consistency.
Columbia Impairment Scale (CIS) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months The Columbia Impairment Scale (CIS) is a 13-item scale that measures adolescents level of adaptive functioning. The scale was used in the NIMH Methods for the Epidemiology of Child and Adolescent Mental Disorders (MECA) study and showed good reliability and validity. It is also correlated with other indicators of psychological distress and with standardized clinician ratings.
Implementation Strategy Usability Scale (ISUS) Post-training, End of Year 1 Usability will be evaluated with the 10-item Implementation Strategy Usability Scale (ISUS), which is based closely on the well-validated System Usability Scale. Ratings are on a 1 to 5 scale and yield a total score from 0 to 100. Half the items are reverse scored; higher total scores reflect greater usability. The ISUS has good inter-item consistency (a = .83) and sensitivity. Research has also demonstrated that the original version of the ISUS (the SUS) functions similarly - and yields similar scores - for adults and youth.
Participant Responsiveness Scale (PRS) Post-training, End of Year 1 Engagement will be measured using the Participant Responsiveness Scale (PRS), an adapted version of the 12-item Patient Responsiveness Scale tailored to be developmentally appropriate for children aged 8 and above as well as adults. The PRS measures two factors, Participation and Enthusiasm. The original Patient Responsiveness Scale has demonstrated strong reliability (a = .86) and construct validity.
Intervention Appropriateness Measure (IAM) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months The Intervention Appropriateness Measure (IAM) is a rigorously developed, pragmatic instrument with strong good internal consistency (a = .87) and test-retest reliability (a = .87).
Adoption Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Adoption is operationalized as the initiation of a clinician first BR-0 or BR-A session at any point during study participation.
Reach Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Reach will be calculated using adoption data as the percentage of clinicians caseloads receiving BR-O or BR-A.
Youth Top Problems (YTP) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months The Youth Top Problems (YTP) assessment is an assessment in which youth and caregivers are asked to list the problems they were most concerned about. Upon completion of the list, respondents are asked to assign a severity rating for each problem by answering the questions: how big of a problem is this for you? (0 = not at all to 10 = very, very much). Respondents are then asked to identify which of the problems listed is the biggest problem right now? Which one is the most important to work on? Then the second and third most important until 3 top problems are identified. The YTP shows excellent concurrence with standardized assessments (Kappa ranging from .78 to .91), while also adding specificity for treatment targets (41% of caregivers-, and 79% of youth-identified top problems were not identified by an item amongst elevated standardized assessment subscales).
Therapeutic Alliance Scale for Adolescents (TASA) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Therapeutic Alliance Scale for Adolescents (TASA) is a widely used rating scale designed to measure the working alliance between clinicians and their adolescent clients. Youth and Counselor forms will be used. Both include 12 seven-point Likert Scale items covering three domains: bond, goals, and tasks.
Treatment Completion/Triage End of study A measure of treatment efficiency, records will be reviewed of treatment disposition after 4 sessions, as well as triage to school/community services/supports.
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8 for Adolescent) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months The Patient Health Questionnaire is one of the most used short depression measures. We will use the Adolescent adopted version of the PHQ-8, which removes the 9th item regarding suicide, which is commonly done in research settings where follow-up may be delayed; this has only minor effect on scoring and does not impact scoring interpretations. The PHQ features 8 items on a four-point scale (0=not at all, 1=several days, 2=more than half the days, 3=nearly everyday) with cutpoints for 5, 10, 15, and 20 representing mild, moderate, moderately severe, and severe levels of depressive symptoms. Four original validation studies were conducted on nearly 10,000 patients, and there have been multiple meta-analyses. Scores have been found valid, with sensitivity of 88% and specificity of 88% for a cutpoint of 10 has been found for Major Depressive Disorders.
Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders Social Relations scale (Neuro-QOL) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months The Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders Social Relations scale (Neuro-QOL) is a widely used 8-item measure of functioning in usual social roles, activities, and responsibilities. Factor analyses and Item Response Theory analyses have ensured broad information parameters without differential item functioning by demographics. Scale scores have been validated and normed on thousands of participants in the US general and clinical inpatient and outpatient settings, presenting with a variety of problem areas. Scores provide a T score with a mean of 50 and SD of 10, aligned with a variety of norming samples. An example item stem is : In the past 7 days I am able to do all of my regular family activities. Response options are on a scale of 1 to 5(1=never, 2=rarely, 3=sometimes, 4=often, 5=always).
Academic Progress Self-Report Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Academic Progress Self-Report is a form successfully employed in other studies of school-based services by the research team to gauge academic success in areas such as homework completion, attendance, tardies, disciplinary action, and praise or discipline from school staff.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method BRISC External Rating Tool (BECT) Baseline, 3 months, 6 months For each case, three recordings will be randomly selected from each BRISC treatment phase and coded for fidelity using the BRISC External Rating Tool (BECT).
Framework for Modifications and Adaptations of Evidence-Based Interventions Baseline, 3 months, 6 months Recorded intervention sessions will be evaluated using the coding system for the Framework for Modifications and Adaptations of Evidence-Based Interventions (FRAME), the leading method for evaluating the nature of intervention adaptations