Cucciare Michael A, Curran Geoffrey M, Craske Michelle G, Abraham Traci, McCarthur Michael B, Marchant-Miros Kathy, Lindsay Jan A, Kauth Michael R, Landes Sara J, Sullivan Greer
Center for Mental Healthcare and Outcomes Research, Central Arkansas Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, 2200 Fort Roots Drive, North Little Rock, AR, 72114, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA.
Implement Sci. 2016 May 10;11:65. doi: 10.1186/s13012-016-0432-4.
Broadly disseminating and implementing evidence-based psychotherapies with high fidelity, particularly cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), has proved challenging for many health-care systems, including the Department of Veterans Affairs, especially in primary care settings such as small or remote clinics. A computer-based tool (based on the coordinated anxiety learning and management (CALM) program) was designed to support primary care-based mental health providers in delivering CBT. The objectives of this study are to modify the CALM tool to meet the needs of mental health clinicians in veterans affairs (VA) community-based outpatient clinics (CBOCs) and rural "veterans", use external facilitation to implement CBT and determine the effect of the CALM tool versus a manualized version of CALM to improve fidelity to the CBT treatment model, and conduct a needs assessment to understand how best to support future implementation of the CALM tool in routine care.
METHODS/DESIGN: Focus groups will inform the redesign of the CALM tool. Mental health providers at regional VA CBOCs; CBT experts; VA experts in implementation of evidence-based mental health practices; and veterans with generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social anxiety disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, "with or without" depression will be recruited. A hybrid type III design will be used to examine the effect of receiving CBT training plus either the CALM tool or a manual version of CALM on treatment fidelity. External facilitation will be used as the overarching strategy to implement both CBT delivery methods. Data will also be collected on symptoms of the targeted disorders. To help prepare for the future implementation of the CALM tool in VA CBOCs, we will perform an implementation need assessment with mental health providers participating in the clinical trial and their CBOC directors.
This project will help inform strategies for delivering CBT with high fidelity in VA CBOCs to veterans with anxiety disorders and PTSD with or without depression. If successful, results of this study could be used to inform a national rollout of the CALM tool in VA CBOCs including providing recommendations for optimizing the adoption and sustained use of the computerized CALM tool among mental health providers in this setting.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT02488551.
广泛传播并高保真地实施循证心理治疗,尤其是认知行为疗法(CBT),已被证明对包括退伍军人事务部在内的许多医疗保健系统都具有挑战性,特别是在小型或偏远诊所等基层医疗环境中。一种基于计算机的工具(基于协同焦虑学习与管理(CALM)项目)旨在支持基层医疗心理健康服务提供者提供CBT。本研究的目的是修改CALM工具,以满足退伍军人事务部(VA)社区门诊诊所(CBOC)和农村“退伍军人”心理健康临床医生的需求,利用外部促进措施实施CBT,并确定CALM工具与CALM手册版本相比对提高CBT治疗模式保真度的效果,以及进行需求评估,以了解如何最好地支持CALM工具在常规护理中的未来实施。
方法/设计:焦点小组将为CALM工具的重新设计提供信息。将招募VA地区CBOC的心理健康服务提供者、CBT专家、实施循证心理健康实践的VA专家,以及患有广泛性焦虑症、惊恐障碍、社交焦虑症、创伤后应激障碍、伴或不伴抑郁症的退伍军人。将采用混合III型设计来检验接受CBT培训并使用CALM工具或CALM手册版本对治疗保真度的影响。外部促进将作为实施两种CBT交付方法的总体策略。还将收集目标疾病症状的数据。为帮助为CALM工具未来在VA CBOC中的实施做好准备,我们将对参与临床试验的心理健康服务提供者及其CBOC主任进行实施需求评估。
该项目将有助于为在VA CBOC中向患有焦虑症和创伤后应激障碍、伴或不伴抑郁症的退伍军人高保真地提供CBT提供策略。如果成功,本研究结果可用于为CALM工具在VA CBOC中的全国推广提供信息,包括为在该环境中优化心理健康服务提供者对计算机化CALM工具的采用和持续使用提供建议。
ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT02488551。