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About
The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility of developing an Early Psychosis CSC service delivery model suitable for rural settings in NC. Major challenges to delivery of specialized health care services for persons in the early stages of psychosis include the high level of provider expertise and the frequency and intensity of services. These challenges limit the feasibility of brick-and-mortar programs to serve individuals living in rural settings. This study proposes to expand service delivery methods to include telehealth as a potential solution.
Full description
The UNC OASIS program currently provides evidenced-based outpatient coordinated specialty care services (CSC) to persons within the first five years of a psychotic disorder. Medical management and psychotherapy services are mainly provided in brick and mortar offices. Supported education, supported employment, and peer support services are provided in offices and also in the community. The service model is relatively intense, involving treatment sessions up to several times a week. Thus a barrier to persons in rural North Carolina receiving CSC services is the time taken to travel to office based appointments.
The purpose of this study is to determine feasibility and acceptability of providing some of the services provided by OASIS via telehealth.
Participants: Up to 10 patients who have been accepted by the OASIS program and who live 45-minutes or more from the UNC OASIS program or another CSC program. Participants must also have home internet bandwidth sufficient to support the telehealth platform and own a computer or other device (smart phone, tablet, etc.) compatible with the telehealth platform.
Procedures (methods): The OASIS program does not exclude patients based on where they live in North Carolina. Potential OASIS patients and their families participate in an initial psychosocial and medical evaluation. At this time the OASIS program director reviews the OASIS program expectations with the patient and family. If the OASIS program and the patient and the patient's family member agree that the OASIS program is a good fit, the patient is then accepted into the program. After acceptance into the OASIS program patients who live 45 minutes or more away from the UNC OASIS or another CSC program and who reside in North Carolina will be informed about the availability of the telehealth pilot project by the OASIS program director.
UNCH has developed a telehealth service that is provided via the UNC electronic medical record platform, EPIC. If interested, the OASIS patient and their family member will meet with a study staff person, who will evaluate whether their internet bandwidth is sufficient to support the EPIC telehealth platform and if they own a computer or other device that supports the EPIC telehealth platform. Patients who are interested and who meet these requirements will then participate in the oral and written informed consent process.
Participants who consent to participate in the study will receive some of their CSC services via telehealth, and will continue to receive some of their services in the OASIS offices. During this pilot phase the project will be flexible about the relative proportion of services delivered via telehealth and in-person. The main study participant is the patient, however since family therapy may be delivered via telehealth interested family members are also asked to consent to study participation.
The OASIS program routinely collects quality assurance data via self-report and clinician-administered assessments. The study will obtain consent from study participants to access this information. In addition to the Quality Assurance document patients who are subjects and their family members who also consent to participate in the the telehealth pilot project will also complete a self-report survey inquiring about their satisfaction with telehealth services.
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2 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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