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Technology-enabled Task-sharing for Depression in Primary Care

University of Washington logo

University of Washington

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Depression in Old Age
Depression

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04055155
P50MH115837 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
STUDY00006748

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will explore and test the feasibility, acceptability, usability, and preliminary effectiveness of a technology-enabled intervention for depression using task-sharing in primary care. We will a) discover barriers and facilitators to task-sharing by frontline primary care staff; b) design an implementation strategy to support task-sharing to deliver a technology-enabled intervention for depression; and c) conduct a small open-label usability trial of the technology-enabled intervention for depression.

Full description

Older adults with depression typically present to primary care rather than specialty mental health treatment and are often un- or undertreated, as the demand for mental health services is greater than the supply of trained providers. Technology is one method to improve access to care by making evidence-based psychosocial interventions (EBPIs) readily accessible. A second method comes from global mental health research, demonstrating that task-sharing can equip non-specialists to provide effective mental health care. This study combines these two approaches, exploring how technology-enhanced EBPI could be used by frontline primary care staff (e.g., nurses, medical assistants) to expand workforce capacity to deliver acceptable, sustainable, and effective treatment for depression. Specifically, we will use task-sharing to deliver a mobile Motivational Physical Activity Targeted Intervention (MPATI), which is based on behavioral activation for depression and uses wearable accelerometer technology to trigger personalized activity goal monitoring. This proposal uses the Discover, Design/Build, Test (DDBT) framework, which leverages user-centered design and implementation science to discover implementation barriers to using task-sharing to deliver MPATI in primary care, to design an implementation strategy to support MPATI delivery, and to conduct a pilot usability trial to test the implementation strategy with the most suitable frontline staff.

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Clinics:

  1. have at least 1 full-time registered nurse (RN) and/or medical assistant (MA) on staff
  2. include older adults on their patient panels.

Clinic administrators

  1. have an administrative or leadership role in the clinic
  2. have been employed in their current role for at least 6 months.

Frontline staff

  1. provide care as RN, MA, case manager, behavioral health consultant, or similar role identified by Practice Champion
  2. be employed at the participating clinic for at least 6 months.

Patients

  1. be ≥65 years of age
  2. report moderate to moderately severe depressive symptoms based on a PHQ-9 score of 10-20
  3. own or have access to a smartphone
  4. have internet or cellular data plan
  5. receive medical clearance from their primary care provider to participate in unstructured physical activity.

Patient exclusion criteria will be based on medical chart review by Practice Champion and include:

  1. current suicidality
  2. severe vision or hearing impairment
  3. pronounced cognitive impairment
  4. use of assistive devices that would impede physical activity.

Trial design

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Staff/Provider end-users
Description:
Testing usability of a technology-enabled behavioral intervention for depression among provider end-users in primary care.
Patient participants
Description:
Testing acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of a technology-enabled behavioral intervention for depression among patients with depression in primary care.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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