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This study will assess the effectiveness of an experimental treatment intervention for adolescents and adults who have experienced their first episode of psychosis during the past two years.
The DUP sub-study will collect pathways to care information that will be used to inform the development and pilot testing of strategies that aim to reduce DUP among individuals experiencing a first episode of psychosis.
Full description
This study is part of the National Institute of Mental Health's Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode (RAISE) Project. The RAISE Project seeks to fundamentally change the trajectory and prognosis of schizophrenia through coordinated and aggressive treatment in the earliest stages of illness. This study, the RAISE Connection Program, is one of the two independent research studies that NIMH has funded to conduct the NIMH RAISE Project. The Connection Program is being supported in whole or in part with Federal funds from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 and the NIMH, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services. The Connection Program aims to to assess the effectiveness of a Team-based intervention for individuals with a first psychotic episode, observing outcomes over time for our study participants. When tracking outcomes, the Connection Program will make comparisons with what is known about the natural history of untreated first episode of psychosis as well as usual care outcomes from other experimental studies.
This study is for people who have experienced symptoms such as hallucinations, unusual thoughts or beliefs, or disorganized thinking for the first time during the past two years. Without treatment, many people have a difficult time with these symptoms, which can be very upsetting and also make it hard to socialize, study, or work.
People have different wishes and needs, and it is not clear what combination of treatments and services is best for any one person. There are many possible treatments and services, such as medications, talk therapy, case management, and school and job counseling. This study will adapt and evaluate the impact of a comprehensive and integrated treatment intervention for first episode psychosis to be delivered in real-world practice settings to promote symptomatic recovery, minimize disability, and maximize social, academic, and vocational functioning.
Participation in this study will last up to 2 years. At the baseline visit, participants will be enrolled to receive the experimental intervention. During the study period, participants will take part in research interviews every three to six months for a total of 6 interviews. Each of these research interviews will take 1.5 to 3 hours to complete. Assessments of participants' health condition, overall function and illness severity, employment status, academic performance, and social functioning will be conducted during these research interviews. In addition to assessing functioning and illness severity, this study will also address substance abuse and utilization of healthcare services. Participants will also be measured for their height, weight and waist circumference. This portion of the study concluded in December 2013.
The RAISE-DUP contract modification seeks additional information on the referral pathways that resulted in enrollment in the RAISE Connection Program from individuals who participated in RAISE Connection Program services and their family members. Information gathered through qualitative research interviews will be used to inform the development and pilot testing of outreach, education, and engagement intervention strategies, to serve the larger goal of reducing the duration of untreated psychosis among individuals experiencing a first episode of psychosis.
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65 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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