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Adapting Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for Chinese Americans

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Major Depression
Interventions
Behavioral: cognitive behavioral therapy
Behavioral: culturally adapted cognitive behavioral therapy
Registration Number
NCT01786746
Lead Sponsor
Claremont McKenna College
Brief Summary

The goals of this study were to a) test whether cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is effective in treating depressed Chinese Americans, b) to develop and test the effectiveness of culturally adapt CBT, and c) to test the differential outcomes of the two treatments.

Detailed Description

It is now known that ethnic minorities are less likely to receive quality health services and evidence worse treatment outcomes when compared with other groups (IOM, 1999; USDHHS, 2001). Moreover, there continues to be a shortage of systematic investigations examining the efficacy of evidence-based treatments (EBTs) with ethnic minorities, especially among Chinese Americans. Developing interventions that are both empirically grounded and that are culturally sensitive and compatible with Chinese culture is one promising strategy that may improve treatment outcomes for this understudied group. The goal of this study is to culturally adapt a cognitive-behavioral therapy manual for use with depressed Chinese American patients. This study will be among the first to develop a culturally adapted EBT for use with this ethnic group and will involve three study phases. Phase I of the study will focus on modifying and refining a CBT intervention protocol into a manualized treatment for Chinese Americans. Phase two involves a randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing the effects of the culturally adapted CBT treatment manual with nonadapted CBT. Phase three will involve further refinement of the treatment manual, data analysis, and report writing. Patients will be recruited from an ethnic-specific mental health center that specializes in treating Asian American clientele to participate in the study. Patients will be randomly assigned to either the adapted CBT treatment or the nonadapted CBT treatment. Moreover, feedback from patients and therapists in both conditions will be used to further refine the new treatment manual, provide valuable information about salient issues in treating depressed Chinese Americans, and will provide initial estimates of treatment parameters that will be used in preparing a larger R01 proposal to further test the adapted intervention.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
61
Inclusion Criteria
  • depression, Chinese American
Exclusion Criteria
  • bipolar, psychotic disorder, primary substance abuse problem, severe medical conditions that induce depression

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Psychotherapycognitive behavioral therapyPsychotherapy arm that consists of a randomization into 12 session manualized cognitive behavioral therapy or culturally adapted cognitive behavioral therapy for Chinese Americans.
Psychotherapyculturally adapted cognitive behavioral therapyPsychotherapy arm that consists of a randomization into 12 session manualized cognitive behavioral therapy or culturally adapted cognitive behavioral therapy for Chinese Americans.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (Change is being assessed)baseline, session 4, 8, 12, and three months follow-up

most commonly used depression rating scale

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Claremont McKenna College

🇺🇸

Claremont, California, United States

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