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Optimizing Suicide Prevention Strategies for Pediatric Primary Care

Not Applicable
Not yet recruiting
Conditions
Suicidal and Self-injurious Behavior
Suicidal Ideation
Depression
Interventions
Behavioral: Treatment as usual
Behavioral: iCHART/cASAP
Registration Number
NCT06194331
Lead Sponsor
University of Pittsburgh
Brief Summary

Increasing rates of suicidal thoughts and behaviors among adolescents must be addressed. The study will adapt and collect preliminary effectiveness data on a digital suicide prevention intervention that can be delivered in pediatric primary care settings by front line pediatricians. The study has the potential to offer a low-cost and scalable primary care intervention that may decrease risk of suicide among at-risk youth.

Detailed Description

The study proposed is a treatment development study to enhance the capacity of pediatric primary care (PPC) to identify and manage suicidal youth by adapting iCHART for PPC settings that lack onsite behavioral health (BH) providers.

Stepped Wedge Cluster Randomized Pilot Trial: Conduct a stepped wedge cluster randomized pilot trial of iCHART-cASAP vs. usual care across 4 PROS practices (across urban, suburban, and rural settings). Up to 20 providers (up to 5 providers per practice) will be enrolled. Following a 3-month baseline period when all practices provide usual care, practices will be randomized to onset to offering the intervention at one of the four, 3-month intervention onset intervals. Each practice will enroll a total of 15 youth across the 15-month pilot trial period for a total of 60 youth. 30 youth will receive usual care and 30 youth will receive iCHART-cASAP.

Delivery of Intervention Intervention will be delivered to adolescent patients and their caregivers receiving services at pediatric primary care practices within the PROS network.When PPC providers are assigned to the usual condition, patients will receive usual practices following identification of suicide risk on the PHQ-9-M. When PPC providers have crossed over to the iCHART- cASAP intervention condition, patients who are identified as suicidal will receive links from PPC providers/office staff to complete cASAP + onboard BRITE app to receive the safety planning and skills training intervention for adolescent and parent/caregiver. Once that is completed, PPC providers receive a summary report and review the safety plan with the patient and parent/caregiver, making revisions as needed. The provider then reviews treatment plan, including behavioral health referrals and schedules follow-up appointment. Next, the PPC provider/office staff enters referral recommendations and follow-up appointment reminders into iCHART's Text2Connect feature, which will increase engagement with the safety plan and facilitate adherence with treatment recommendations.

Providers will approach patients and parents/caregivers about the research study during their office visit, and interested families will complete a permission to contact form for research staff. Research staff will contact and describe the study, answer any questions, and obtain parental consent/youth assent.

Sample Size and Power Considerations Once usability testing is complete, 60 participants will be recruited from 4 practices randomized to begin utilizing iCHART during one of the 3-month intervention intervals. At the end of the trial, 30 participants will be enrolled when practices were delivering usual care and 30 participants will be enrolled when practices were delivering iCHART- cASAP.

Sample size and power considerations center on the precision of confidence interval (CI) width estimation for feasibility outcomes. Based on best practices for feasibility studies, and given the sample size of 60 and 5% type I error rate, there is ability to estimate 95% confidence interval with margin-of-errors ≤0.33 for the primary outcomes of depression and suicidal thoughts and behaviors.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SEQUENTIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Treatment as usualTreatment as usualWhen patients disclose suicidal ideation on the PHQ-9, a treatment as usual approach will be given to the patient and their parent by the pediatrician which includes a paper safety plan will be completed and given to the patient and a referral placed for the patient to begin behavioral health services.
iCHART/cASAPiCHART/cASAPAn intervention previously studied in the ETUDES Center along with a computerized version of our As Safe As Possible intervention. 1. Safety Planning App for suicidal youth which enables a primary care provider to streamline the gold standard of care for those with current suicidality symptoms through an app; 2. Mental Health Screener questionnaire that gathers additional mental health symptoms, treatment preferences, and family's readiness for treatment engagement to help a primary care provider make a personalized, tailored treatment plan a suicidal youth is more likely to adhere to; 3. Text Messages which aims to provide texts for 2-3 weeks to motivate you to engage with the safety plan and recommended treatment following the patient visit. 4. cASAP is a computerized version of the As Safe As Possible intervention that offers self-led modules with psychoeducation about safety planning, cognitive-behavioral skills to cope with distress, and facilitate collaboration with parents.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Depression Severity6-month follow-up

Total scores from the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9-M) will be used to assess depression severity, as a primary outcome. The PHQ-9M uses scaled responses of '0=not at all, 1=several days, 2=more than half the days, 3=nearly every day'.

Application utilizationMonitored over 6 months

Use of the iCHART-cASAP components and web portals will be monitored. Utilization will be measured by the number and proportion of adolescents, parents, and providers who have engaged with the application over time.

Acceptability6-month follow-up

Acceptability of cASAP and the iCHART-cASAP intervention will be assessed through the Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM). The scaled options for the measure are: '1=Completely disagree, 2=Disagree, 3=Neither agree nor disagree, 4=Agree, 5=Completely agree'

Provider Usability6-month follow-up

System Usability Scale (SUS) will assess usability. The System Usability Scale uses scaled options of: '1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neutral, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree'.

Suicidal ideation and behavior on CSSRS6-month follow-up

Suicidal attempt \& ideation will be measured through the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS). Assign score of 0 if no ideation/behavior present and assign a score of 1 if ideation/behavior present. A "yes" answer any time during treatment to question 9 on the PHQ-9 indicates suicidal ideation. A "yes" answer any time during treatment to any 1 of the 5 suicidal behavior questions (Categories 7-10) on the C-SSRS. C-SSRS Categories 7-10 are as follows: 7-Aborted Attempt 8-Interrupted Attempt 9-Actual Attempt (non-fatal) 10-Completed Suicide. Any score greater than 0 is important/may indicate need for intervention.

Service Utilization - SACA6-month follow-up

Frequency and type of behavioral/mental health and primary care services using the Service Assessment for Children and Adolescents (SACA).

Provider Feasibility of Intervention Measure6-month follow-up

Provider Feasibility will be measured using the Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM). The Feasibilty of Intervention Measure uses scaled options of: '1=Completely disagree, 2=Disagree, 3=Neither agree nor disagree, 4=Agree, 5=Completely agree'.

Suicidal ideation and behavior on PHQ-9M6-month follow-up

Suicidal ideation and attempt will be measured by 3 items on the PHQ-9-M (item #9 with scaled options of '0=not at all, 1=several days, 2=more than half the days, 3=nearly every day', past month ideation, prior suicide attempt) as a primary outcome.

Patient Usability6-month follow-up

Patient usability will be measured by the Systems Usability Survey (SUS). The System Usability Scale uses scaled options of: '1=strongly disagree, 2=disagree, 3=neutral, 4=agree, 5=strongly agree'.

Patient Satisfaction6-month follow-up

Satisfaction will be measured with the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ). The scaled options for the CSQ vary as follows:

Question 1: "4=Excellent, 3=Good, 2=Fair, 1=Poor" Question 2: "1=No, Definitely Not, 2=No, Not Really, 3=Yes, Generally, 4=Yes, Definitely" Question 3: "4=Almost all of my needs have been met, 3=Most of my needs have been met, 2=Only a few of my needs have been met, 1=None of my needs have been met" Question 4: "1=No, definitely not, 2=No, I don't think so, 3=Yes, I think so, 4=Yes, Definitely" Question 5: "1=Quite Dissatisfied, 2=Indifferent or mildly dissatisfied, 3=Mostly satisfied, 4=Very satisfied" Question 6: "4=Yes, they helped a great deal, 3=Yes, they helped somewhat, 2=No, they really didn't help, 1=No, they seemed to make things worse" Question 7: "4=Very satisfied, 3=Mostly satisfied, 2=Indifferent or mildly dissatisfied, 1=Quite dissatisfied" Question 8: "1=No, Definitely not, 2=No, I don't think so, 3=Yes, I think so, 4=Yes, Definitely

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Stress6-month follow-up

Stress will be measured by the Pediatric Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Psychological Stress Experiences 4- item Short Form. The scaled options for this measure are: '1=Never, 2=Rarely, 3=Sometimes, 4=Often, 5=Always'.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Pediatric Research in Office Settings National Headquarters

🇺🇸

Itasca, Illinois, United States

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