Benuto Lorraine T, Reyes Stephanie R, Ramirez Valeria, Falcon-Ruiz Nancy, Villar Gabriela, Rojas Perez Oscar F
DICE Center, Reno, 505 South Arlington Suite 102 Reno, NV, 89509, USA.
Department of Psychology, MS0296, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, 89557, USA.
J Racial Ethn Health Disparities. 2025 Jun 27. doi: 10.1007/s40615-025-02509-3.
The inclusion of ethnic and racial minoritized communities in clinical research is crucial in order to determine the generalizability of findings that support evidence-based and empirically supported treatments. To date, many randomized controlled trials assessing evidence-based treatments have predominantly non-Latinx white samples. Therefore, it is unknown whether treatment findings are applicable across diverse groups. Though transdiagnostic treatments have shown promise among ethnic and racial groups, little is known about the Unified Protocol and its effectiveness across diverse groups. This systematic review aims to provide an overview of existing work and highlight inclusion rates of ethnic and racial minoritized communities in randomized controlled trials assessing the Unified Protocol. A systematic review of published literature focusing on randomized controlled trials utilizing the Unified Protocol with ethnic and racial minoritized communities was conducted using PsycInfo, EMBASE, PubMed, and Medline databases. The review included 19 articles (reduced from 457). This manuscript summarizes these results in terms of race and ethnicity demographics, recruitment methods, diagnoses, treatment format, treatment duration, and outcomes for adolescent and adult populations. We found that ethnic and racial minoritized communities have mostly been underrepresented in randomized controlled trials on the Unified Protocol. Finally, building from the existing literature, we provide key recommendations for clinical scientists conducting clinical outcome research with ethnic and racial minoritized communities, which can enhance the representation of underrepresented groups in research and reduce health inequities.
将少数族裔和种族群体纳入临床研究对于确定支持循证治疗和实证支持治疗的研究结果的普遍性至关重要。迄今为止,许多评估循证治疗的随机对照试验主要采用非拉丁裔白人样本。因此,尚不清楚治疗结果是否适用于不同群体。尽管跨诊断治疗在少数族裔和种族群体中显示出前景,但对于统一方案及其在不同群体中的有效性知之甚少。本系统评价旨在概述现有工作,并突出少数族裔和种族群体在评估统一方案的随机对照试验中的纳入率。使用PsycInfo、EMBASE、PubMed和Medline数据库对发表的文献进行了系统评价,重点关注使用统一方案对少数族裔和种族群体进行的随机对照试验。该评价纳入了19篇文章(从457篇中筛选得出)。本手稿从种族和族裔人口统计学、招募方法、诊断、治疗形式、治疗持续时间以及青少年和成年人群的结局等方面总结了这些结果。我们发现,在关于统一方案的随机对照试验中,少数族裔和种族群体大多代表性不足。最后,基于现有文献,我们为临床科学家对少数族裔和种族群体进行临床结局研究提供了关键建议,这可以提高研究中代表性不足群体的比例,并减少健康不平等现象。