Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, BRiTE Center, University of Washington, Seattle (Ben-Zeev, Buck, Meller, Hallgren); Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, and Department of Psychiatry, Dartmouth Geisel School of Medicine, Hanover, New Hampshire (Hudenko).
Psychiatr Serv. 2020 Dec 1;71(12):1218-1224. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.202000239. Epub 2020 Jul 7.
This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and clinical utility of training intensive psychiatric community care team members to serve as "mobile interventionists" who engage patients in recovery-oriented texting exchanges.
A 3-month pilot randomized controlled trial was conducted to compare the mobile interventionist approach as an add-on to assertive community treatment (ACT) versus ACT alone. Participants were 49 individuals with serious mental illness (62% with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder, 24% with bipolar disorder, and 14% with depression). Clinical outcomes were evaluated at baseline, posttreatment, and 6-month follow-up, and satisfaction was evaluated posttreatment.
The intervention appeared feasible (95% of participants assigned to the mobile interventionist arm initiated the intervention, texting on 69% of possible days and averaging four messages per day), acceptable (91% reported satisfaction), and safe (no adverse events reported). Exploratory posttreatment clinical effect estimations suggested greater reductions in the severity of paranoid thoughts (Cohen's d=-0.61) and depression (d=-0.59) and improved illness management (d=0.31) and recovery (d=0.23) in the mobile interventionist group.
Augmentation of care with a texting mobile interventionist proved to be feasible, acceptable, safe, and clinically promising. The findings are encouraging given the relative ease of training practitioners to serve as mobile interventionists, the low burden placed on patients and practitioners, and the simplicity of the technology. The technical resources are widely accessible to patients and practitioners, boding well for potential intervention scalability. When pandemics such as COVID-19 block the possibility of in-person patient-provider contact, evidence-based texting interventions can serve a crucial role in supporting continuity of care.
本研究旨在评估培训强化精神科社区护理团队成员担任“移动干预者”的可行性和临床实用性,使他们与患者进行以康复为导向的短信交流。
一项为期 3 个月的试点随机对照试验比较了移动干预者方法作为附加于强化社区治疗(ACT)与单独 ACT 的效果。参与者为 49 名患有严重精神疾病的个体(62%为精神分裂症/分裂情感障碍,24%为双相情感障碍,14%为抑郁症)。临床结局在基线、治疗后和 6 个月随访时进行评估,治疗后评估满意度。
该干预措施似乎是可行的(95%分配到移动干预者组的参与者开始了干预,在可能的 69%的天数发送短信,平均每天发送 4 条消息),可接受(91%的人表示满意)且安全(无不良事件报告)。探索性治疗后临床效果评估表明,移动干预者组偏执思维严重程度(Cohen's d=-0.61)和抑郁(d=-0.59)的降低更明显,疾病管理(d=0.31)和康复(d=0.23)得到改善。
用短信移动干预者来增强护理被证明是可行的、可接受的、安全的和有临床前景的。鉴于培训从业者担任移动干预者相对容易,对患者和从业者的负担较小,以及技术的简单性,这一发现令人鼓舞。技术资源广泛可用于患者和从业者,为潜在的干预措施可扩展性提供了良好的条件。当 COVID-19 等大流行阻止了医患之间的面对面接触时,基于证据的短信干预可以在支持护理连续性方面发挥至关重要的作用。