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Showing papers by "Robert A. Rosenheck published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A patient SES index based on parental education, parental occupational prestige, and race/ethnicity was constructed to assess whether patient socioeconomic status (SES) moderates the effectiveness of coordinated specialty care for first-episode psychosis and to investigate possible mechanisms.
Abstract: Objective To assess whether patient socioeconomic status (SES) moderates the effectiveness of coordinated specialty care for first-episode psychosis and to investigate possible mechanisms. Data sources A secondary analysis of data from the RAISE-ETP Trial, which was conducted from 2010-2014. Study design RAISE-ETP was a cluster-randomized trial comparing a coordinated specialty care (CSC) intervention called NAVIGATE with usual community care. We constructed a patient SES index based on parental education, parental occupational prestige, and race/ethnicity. After identifying correlates of SES, we used OLS regression analysis to estimate treatment effects on the major study outcomes across quartiles of the index. We also examined whether correlates of SES including the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP), and participation in NAVIGATE might account for the observed difference in effectiveness of CSC by SES. Principal findings The trial sample had a similar SES distribution to the US population, and SES was positively correlated with all mental health outcomes and several potential moderators at baseline. CSC substantially improved the main trial outcomes compared to community care for patients in the highest SES quartile but had small and statistically insignificant benefits for the remaining 75% of patients. Intervention participation rates and several potential moderators did not explain this disparity. Conclusions CSC may be more effective for high-SES patients with early psychosis than low-SES patients. Additional research is needed to understand why CSC is less effective for low-SES patients and to develop methods to increase effectiveness for this subgroup.

14 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that there is a sizable subgroup of adults who present to eviction court with persistent housing and mental health issues who do not receive adequate assistance in addressing these issues.
Abstract: Millions of people are evicted from rental properties in the U.S. annually, but little is known about them and their mental health. This study followed a cohort of eviction court participants over time and assessed their housing and mental health outcomes. One hundred and twenty-one tenants were recruited from an eviction court in New Haven, Connecticut, and their housing, mental health, and psychosocial status were assessed at baseline, 1, 3, 6, and 9 months following their encounter with the court. Inverse probability weighting was used for missing data. At baseline, 42% of participants had appeared in eviction court before, 28% had experienced eviction, and 44% had been previously homeless. In addition, 39% screened positive for generalized anxiety disorder, 37% for posttraumatic stress disorder, 33% for major depressive disorder, and 17% reported suicidal ideation. At follow-up, participants experienced increased days of housing instability and homelessness over time with some persistent mental health symptoms. Less than one-quarter of participants received any mental health treatment during the 9-month follow-up period. About 54% of participants followed reported that they had to change their residence after their court appearance consistent with court records. Participants who had an eviction-related move experienced greater housing instability over time than participants who did not. Together, these findings suggest that there is a sizable subgroup of adults who present to eviction court with persistent housing and mental health issues who do not receive adequate assistance in addressing these issues.

12 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
02 Jan 2021
TL;DR: These data demonstrate a large expansion of services for homeless veterans, especially supported housing, and successful maintenance of focus on the intended target population.
Abstract: In 2009, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) set a goal of ending veteran homelessness by expanding health care and housing services. The process of expanding programs on a large scale can lead...

8 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a large sample of Black and White adults with clinical diagnoses of schizophrenia was used to identify the magnitude of differences in sociodemographic and clinical characteristics, including experiences of discrimination and service use.

8 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors report that Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a significant problem among US veterans with increasing rates of OUD and overdose, and thus has substantial importance for service delivery within the Veterans Health A...
Abstract: Opioid use disorder (OUD) is a significant problem among US veterans with increasing rates of OUD and overdose, and thus has substantial importance for service delivery within the Veterans Health A...

7 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used nationally representative survey data to examine the generalizability of this extensive body of research by comparing sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of male veteran veterans health service (VHS) users with veteran non-VHS users (n = 840) and non-veteran service users.
Abstract: Mental health (MH) research among veterans receiving services from the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is extensive and growing and informs many clinical practice guidelines. We used nationally representative survey data to examine the generalizability of this extensive body of research by comparing sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of male veteran veterans health service (VHS) users (n = 491) with veteran non-VHS users (n = 840) and nonveteran (n = 6300) MH service users. VHS users were older, more often reported Black race, and less likely to have private or Medicaid insurance, but had similar prevalence of psychiatric or substance use disorder diagnoses but with a greater prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). VHS users reported higher rates of medical diagnoses, pain interference, and poorer physical and MH status. These results suggest that VHA MH research may be reasonably generalizable to US mental health service users with caveats regarding age, PTSD diagnosis, pain, and racial distribution.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined rates and correlates of transitioning from not being employed at admission to working four months after discharge using national Veterans Health Administration (VHA) program evaluation data on veterans engaged in specialized intensive PTSD treatment.
Abstract: Severe Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) has been identified as a significant impediment to employment. However, little is known about correlates of employment recovery after a period of not working among veterans with severe PTSD treated in specialized intensive treatment programs. This study examines rates and correlates of transitioning from not being employed at admission to working four months after discharge using national Veterans Health Administration (VHA) program evaluation data on veterans engaged in specialized intensive PTSD treatment (N = 27,339). Results suggest that only 5.68% of the sample made the transition to employment while 10.6% lost employment, 8.9% worked both at admission and following discharge, and 74.9%, did not work either at admission or following discharge. Multinomial regression analysis found that compared to other groups, veterans who became employed were younger, less likely to receive service-connected disability payments, and experienced a significantly greater reduction in PTSD symptoms. Findings from this study highlight that this distinct population has very poor employment outcomes and deserves more attention, and that reducing PTSD symptoms can lead to improved employment outcomes. Efforts to integrate evidence-based vocational rehabilitation practice into residential PTSD treatment targeting PTSD symptoms is encouraged.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While use of opioids is a well‐established risk factor for opioid use disorder (OUD), its association with lifetime use of other addictive substances and the emergence of other lifetime substance use disorders (SUDs) has not been studied.
Abstract: Objectives While use of opioids is a well-established risk factor for opioid use disorder (OUD), its association with lifetime use of other addictive substances and the emergence of other lifetime substance use disorders (SUDs) has not been studied. Methods We used data from 36 309 US adults in the 2012-2013 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions III to identify those with lifetime opioid use (n = 4090; 11.3%). Of these individuals, we quantified use of other addictive substances; development of OUD and other SUDs; and whether use of opioids and development of OUD came before or after use of other substances and the emergence of other SUDs. Results Of the 11.3% of adults who reported any opioid use, 98.2% of such users reported use of other addictive substances. Of these opioid users, 18.1% met criteria for lifetime OUD but only 3.5% had OUD alone; 47.6% had SUDs other than OUD and 14.6% had OUD plus another SUD. In most instances, opioid use followed use of other substances and OUD followed development of other SUDs. Conclusion Opioid use is typically linked to use of multiple substances and while less than 20% developed OUD, more than half developed either OUD or another SUD. Opioid use and OUD most often followed other substance use and the emergence of other SUDs. Early intervention in OUD should consider potential complications of other present or past SUDs, and both prevention and treatment development efforts should focus on the multi-morbid dimensions of the current opioid epidemic.

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: While attitudes towards socializing with people with mental illness did not differ significantly with different levels of psychiatric education, beliefs about treatability and biopsychosocial etiology seem to be strengthened after a classroom psychiatry course but not further reinforced after the clinical clerkship.

5 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors examined the independent association of PTSD symptom severity, pain interference, non-PTSD psychiatric and substance use disorders (SUD), and medical illnesses with each of four domains of function: mental health-related quality of life and physical functioning assessed with the Mental Health Composite Score (MCS) and Physical Function Score (PFS) of the Short Form-12; perceived social support from the Interpersonal Support and Evaluation List-12 (ISEL-12); and self-reported past year employment.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that early psychosis may affect older populations more than previously recognized, but comorbidity with substance use disorders showed similar elevations.
Abstract: Epidemiologic data on first-episode psychosis is limited due to the infrequency of cases in the general population. This study uses the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (N = 36,309) to examine population-based estimates of early psychosis based on adults who report a first-time diagnosis of schizophrenia from a doctor in the past year and compares them with those receiving diagnoses in previous years. Altogether, 60 respondents reported past-year schizophrenia (170 per 100,000) or 6.7% of 901 with any reported schizophrenia. Mean age was 41.4 ± 2.1, and they reported significantly higher rates of any past-year substance use disorder (44.7%) than individuals diagnosed in previous years (27.7%), specifically alcohol use disorder. Compared with other samples (many of which excluded older adults), this study suggests that early psychosis may affect older populations more than previously recognized, but comorbidity with substance use disorders showed similar elevations.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a three stage model of major depressive disorder (MDD) and differences in behavioral histories/experiences and multi-morbidities between stages was presented and compared with three groups of adults with MDD histories.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a cross-sectional analysis of veterans who received VHA care during Fiscal Year 2012 (N = 5,450,078), compared the prevalence of opioid use disorder (OUD) and other sociodemographic, and clinical factors among homeless and non-homeless veterans.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the proportions and diverse characteristics of these sub-populations, their mental and substance use diagnoses, and related service use, and concluded that the differences observed in the diverse Black populations of the USA, across measures of mental and physical health, and substances use, deserve attention in future research, policy, and program development.
Abstract: Purpose Existing literature on the epidemiology of psychiatric and substance use disorders and service use among African Americans in the USA has not fully addressed the heterogeneity of Black populations. This study compares the proportions and diverse characteristics of these sub-populations, their mental and substance use diagnoses, and related service use. Methods The data for this study was obtained from the restricted version of the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions Wave III (NESARC-III). Participants who identified as Black/African Americans were categorized into four groups: African-born, Caribbean-born, US-born with at least one immigrant parent, and US-born with both parents born in the USA. Effect sizes were used to evaluate bivariate between-group differences and multinomial logistic regression analysis was used to identify factors that independently differentiated each of the first three groups from the reference group termed US-born. Results This exploratory analysis strengthened the notion of the immigrant paradox as African- and Caribbean-born Black individuals scored significantly higher on all measures of quality of life and had fewer mental health and substance use diagnoses, but this advantage was not observed in the children of immigrants born in the USA. There were few significant differences in service use across the groups after adjusting for clinical characteristics. Conclusion The differences observed in the diverse Black populations of the USA, across measures of mental and physical health, and substance use, deserve attention in future research, policy, and program development.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two post-discharge suicide prevention strategies based on Enhanced Contact and Psychotherapy were cost-effective in comparison to a single priority appointment, considering reasonable thresholds of willingness to pay.
Abstract: Objective:To determine the cost-effectiveness of 2 strategies for post-discharge suicide prevention, an Enhanced Contact intervention based on repeated in-person and telephone contacts, and an indi...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the prevalence of adverse family experiences (AFEs), their association with poor school engagement and performance, and whether behavioral health conditions mediate the association among US adolescents.
Abstract: To examine the prevalence of adverse family experiences (AFEs), their association with poor school engagement and performance, and whether behavioral health conditions mediate the association among US adolescents. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of data from adolescents aged 12–17 years from the 2016–2018 National Survey of Children’s Health (n = 41,648 unweighted). We first estimated the prevalence of AFEs, investigated the association of AFEs with school engagement and performance, and whether behavioral health conditions mediate such relationships, using multivariable-adjusted Poisson regression models. A mediation analysis was used and covariates included socio-demographic characteristics and co-morbid medical conditions. A total of 52.9% of US adolescents (nationally representative of 12.9 million adolescents nationwide) reported experiencing at least one form of AFE, the most common of which included parental divorce/separation (33.1%), economic hardship (22.0%) and living with a person with substance misuse problems (11.5%). Adolescents with ≥4 AFEs had poorer outcomes in school engagement and performance (p < 0.001 each) when compared to those with no AFEs. Behavioral health conditions (e.g., anxiety, depression, and conduct problems) partially mediated these relationships (p < 0.01 each). The indirect effect of behavioral health conditions accounted for 20.4% of the total effect in the association between AFEs and school performance (p < 0.001). AFEs are common among US adolescents, and cumulative AFEs are associated with behavioral health conditions, which may in turn reduce school engagement and performance. While reducing AFEs is important in children and adolescents, addressing potentially resultant behavioral health conditions is equally important in improving school engagement and performance.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Veterans with AUD who used and continued naltrexone were primarily those with multimorbidity and extensive involvement in psychiatric treatment.
Abstract: Background and objectives Despite substantial evidence of the efficacy of naltrexone in treating alcohol use disorder (AUD), naltrexone is used infrequently and often for short durations. Understanding factors related to the initiation and continued use of naltrexone could identify targets for improving its use in clinical practice. Methods We used the Fiscal year 2012 national data from the Veterans Health Administration to identify the proportion of veterans diagnosed with AUD who initiated and then continued to receive naltrexone for AUD over a 6-month period (N = 67,788). We further examined correlates of any use and continued use, and patterns of use in inpatient and outpatient mental health services and psychotropic prescription fills. Comparisons were made using bivariate analyses and multinomial logistic regression. Results Among the veterans diagnosed with AUD, 2.02% initiated treatment with naltrexone. Naltrexone initiation was associated with recent homelessness, concurrent psychiatric disorders, receipt of psychiatric outpatient services, psychotropic prescription fills, residential treatment, and psychiatric and medical-surgical hospitalization. Of the 1,366 patients initiating naltrexone, 43.2% (590) received 2 to 5 prescriptions and 16.3% (223) received more than 5 prescriptions for naltrexone. Use of naltrexone beyond one prescription was associated with homelessness, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, psychotropic medication use, and psychiatric hospitalization. Conclusion Veterans with AUD who used and continued naltrexone were primarily those with multimorbidity and extensive involvement in psychiatric treatment. Scientific significance Prior studies examined the correlates of initiation of naltrexone but retention in treatment has received less attention. This study identified the frequency and important patient and service correlates of continued use of naltrexone. (Am J Addict 2021;30:55-64).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The hypothesis that multimorbidity is a critical characteristic of Veterans treated at a co-located multi-service Veteran’s Health Administration (VHA) program originally established to treat Veterans living with SMI is tested.
Abstract: It has been suggested that psychiatric multimorbidity may better characterize severely impaired psychiatric patients than individual severe mental illness (SMI) diagnoses, and that these patients may be better served by centers offering integrated co-located, psychiatric and social services than in conventional clinics providing one-to-one care. We tested the hypothesis that multimorbidity is a critical characteristic of Veterans treated at a co-located multi-service Veteran's Health Administration (VHA) program originally established to treat Veterans living with SMI. Administrative data from the VA Connecticut Health Care System from fiscal year 2012 were used to compare veterans using diverse mental health and social services at the Errera Community Care Center (ECCC), an integrated "one-stop shop" for SMI veterans, and those seen exclusively at standard outpatient mental health clinics. Bivariate and multiple logistic regression analyses were used to compare groups on demographic characteristics, psychiatric and medical diagnoses, service utilization, and psychotropic medication fills. Results: Of the 11,092 veterans included in the study, 2281 (20.6%) had been treated at the ECCC and 8811 (79.4%) had not. Multivariable analysis highlighted the association of treatment in the ECCC and younger age, lower income, homelessness, and especially multimorbidity including both multiple substance use and multiple psychiatric diagnoses. Programs originally designed to address the diverse needs of patients living with SMI and homelessness may be usefully characterized as treating patients with psychiatric multimorbidity, a term of greater clinical relevance. Effectiveness research is needed to evaluate the one-stop shop approach to their treatment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper examined ECT perceptions and knowledge in the 3 most populous countries in the world and found that negative perceptions and inaccurate knowledge about ECT persist in the United States and other countries persist.
Abstract: Objective Despite the established efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), negative perceptions and inaccurate knowledge about ECT in the United States and other countries persist. This study examined ECT perceptions and knowledge in the 3 most populous countries in the world. Methods We recruited participants who screened positive for depression on the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9) in the United States (n = 1643), India (n = 1469), and China (n = 328) and compared responses on the ECT-Perception and Knowledge Scale. Results Although the US sample had significantly higher PHQ-9 scores than the India and China samples, the US sample was less likely to have been offered ECT or to have ever received ECT. Moreover, the US sample scored lower on the ECT Perception and Knowledge subscales than the other samples indicating more negative perceptions and inaccurate knowledge about ECT. Across samples, there were moderate fears about ECT being painful or causing brain damage, and misconceptions about ECT being outdated and adverse effects of induced seizures. Higher PHQ-9 scores were correlated with more negative perceptions. Conclusions Greater public education is needed about ECT, particularly in the United States. Misperceptions and lack of knowledge may hinder utilization of ECT in India, China, and the United States.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Both veterans and staff indicated clear preference for return to face-to-face service delivery after the pandemic with some telehealth included and self-reported decline in therapeutic alliance was associated with parallel decline in clinical status indicators.
Abstract: Social distancing due to COVID-19 may adversely impact treatment of adults with serious mental illness, especially those receiving intensive forms of community-based care, in part through weakening of the therapeutic alliance. Veterans and staff at a Veterans Affair (VA) medical center were surveyed 3 months after social distancing disrupted usual service delivery in intensive community-based treatment programs. Veterans (n = 105) and staff (n = 112) gave similar multi-item ratings of service delivery after social distancing, which involved far less face-to-face contact and more telephone contact than usual and rated their therapeutic alliances and clinical status similarly as "not as good" on average than before social distancing. Self-reported decline in therapeutic alliance was associated with parallel decline in clinical status indicators. Both veterans and staff indicated clear preference for return to face-to-face service delivery after the pandemic with some telehealth included.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Philippine medical students had less stigmatizing mental health attitudes compared to students from the USA, Brazil, Ghana, Nigeria, and China and with medical students from 5 other countries.
Abstract: A mixed-methods study assessed mental illness stigma within the Philippine medical community. A 43-item survey was completed by three groups: (1) medical students with no prior mental health training (N = 76, 31%), (2) medical students with psychiatric classroom and/or clerkship experience (N = 43, 18%), and (3) graduate physicians (N = 125, 51%). Exploratory factor analysis identified three de-stigmatized factors for comparisons between the three Filipino groups and with medical students from 5 other countries. Surveys were followed by in-depth qualitative interviews (N = 15). The three de-stigmatized factors were as follows: (1) acceptance of social integration of mental health patients, (2) positive personal interactions with people experiencing mental illness, and (3) rejection of supernatural explanations for mental illness. While overall scores among the sample showed highly de-stigmatized attitudes, graduate physicians reported more stigmatized scores than students on social integration and personal socialization (F = 3.45, p = 0.033, F = 4.11, p = 0.018, respectively). Filipino medical students also had less stigmatizing mental health attitudes compared to students from the USA, Brazil, Ghana, Nigeria, and China. Qualitative interviews confirmed low levels of mental health stigma among the Philippine medical community, while acknowledging the persistence of stigma in the general Philippine populace.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the association of mental illness, excluding substance use disorders, with risk for incarceration in US adults and found that mental illness alone was not associated with incarceration.
Abstract: High rates of psychiatric disorders in correctional facilities have fueled widespread concern about the “criminalization of mental illness.” While the link between incarceration, substance abuse, and antisocial-personality disorder is well established, the relationship between non-substance-related psychiatric disorders and incarceration has not been thoroughly investigated. This study examines the association of mental illness, excluding substance use disorders, with risk for incarceration in US adults. Nationally representative data from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions-III (NESARC-III) were used to compare the proportions of respondents with lifetime incarceration among those with no lifetime history of DSM-5 disorders, or with lifetime history of mental illness, substance use disorders, dual diagnosis, and antisocial personality/conduct disorder. Logistic regression analysis was used to examine the independent association of incarceration with mental illness alone, both in comparison to and net of associations with sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics. Among adults with mental illness alone, 6.7% reported past incarceration, compared to 4.8% with no history of DSM-5 disorders, and 20–40% in other DSM-5 diagnostic groups. Sociodemographic and behavioral risk factors were more strongly associated with incarceration (c-statistics = 0.74 and 0.77, respectively), than mental illness (c-statistic = 0.56). Schizophrenia or other psychoses and borderline personality disorder were independently associated with incarceration, but with effect sizes no greater than eight other sociodemographic or behavioral risk factors. A weak association of mental illness alone with incarceration was found, despite high level of public attention to “criminalization of mental illness.”

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrate the utility of latent classes in evaluating the effect of an intervention on an outcome through multiple indicators of mediation, with each class representing a different mediating pathway.
Abstract: This paper demonstrates the utility of latent classes in evaluating the effect of an intervention on an outcome through multiple indicators of mediation. These indicators are observed intermediate variables that identify an underlying latent class mediator, with each class representing a different mediating pathway. The use of a latent class mediator allows us to avoid modeling the complex interactions between the multiple indicators and ensures the decomposition of the total mediating effects into additive effects from individual mediating pathways, a desirable feature for evaluating multiple indicators of mediation. This method is suitable when the goal is to estimate the total mediating effects that can be decomposed into the additive effects of distinct mediating pathways. Each indicator may be involved in multiple mediation pathways and at the same time multiple indicators may contribute to a single mediating pathway. The relative importance of each pathway may vary across subjects. We applied this method to the analysis of the first 6 months of data from a 2-year clustered randomized trial for adults in their first episode of schizophrenia. Four indicators of mediation are considered: individual resiliency training; family psychoeducation; supported education and employment; and a structural assessment for medication. The improvement in symptoms was found to be mediated by the latent class mediator derived from these four service indicators. Simulation studies were conducted to assess the performance of the proposed model and showed that the simultaneous estimation through the maximum likelihood yielded little bias when the entropy of the indicators was high.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare Black and White individuals with regard to the use of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and find that the disparity in access to psychiatric treatment is greater for black individuals than white individuals.
Abstract: Racial disparities in access to psychiatric treatment are well documented, but less is known about disparities in use of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment.To compare Black and White individual...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Almost three-fourths of people with lifetime suicide attempts have not attempted for more than 5 years, suggesting recovery involves not only psychiatric and substance use disorders but improvements in key socio-demographics and social connectedness over many years.

Posted ContentDOI
26 Mar 2021
TL;DR: First adapting OnTrackNY (OTNY), a CSC program currently being implemented across the US, into OnTrackChile (OTCH), and then examining its effectiveness and implementation in Chile will help determine the feasibility, effectiveness, and cost for delivering CSC services in Chile.
Abstract: Background: Substantial data from high-income countries support early interventions in the form of evidence-based Coordinated Specialty Care (CSC) for people experiencing First Episode Psychosis (FEP) to ameliorate symptoms and minimize disability. Chile is unique among Latin American countries in providing universal access to FEP services through a national FEP policy that mandates identification of FEP individuals in primary care and guarantees delivery of community-based FEP treatments within a public health care system. Nonetheless, previous research has documented that FEP services currently provided at mental health clinics do not provide evidence-based approaches. This proposal aims to address this shortfall by first adapting OnTrackNY (OTNY), a CSC program currently being implemented across the US, into OnTrackChile (OTCH), and then examine its effectiveness and implementation in Chile.Methods: The Dynamic Adaptation Process will be used first to inform the adaptation and implementation of OTCH to the Chilean context. Then, a Hybrid Type 1 Trial design will test its effectiveness and cost and evaluate its implementation using a cluster-randomized controlled trial (RCT) (N = 300 from 21 outpatient clinics). The OTCH program will be offered in half of these outpatient clinics to individuals ages 15-35. Usual care services will continue to be offered at the other clinics. Given the current COVID-19 pandemic, most research and intervention procedures will be conducted remotely. The study will engage participants over the course of two years, with assessments administered at enrollment, 12 months and 24 months. Primary outcomes include: implementation (fidelity, acceptability, and uptake) and service outcomes (person-centeredness, adherence, and retention). Secondary outcomes comprise participant-level outcomes such as symptoms, functioning, and recovery orientation. Over the course of the study, interviews and focus groups with stakeholders will be conducted to better understand the implementation of OTCH. Discussion: Findings from this study will help determine the feasibility, effectiveness, and cost for delivering CSC services in Chile. Lessons learned about facilitators and barriers related to the implementation of the model could help inform the approach needed for these services to be further expanded throughout Latin America.Trial registration number: www.clinicaltrials.gov: NCT04247711. Registered 30 January 2020, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04247711.

DOI
15 Nov 2021
TL;DR: In this paper, digital interventions delivering Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia (Digital CBTi) may increase utilization of effective care for a common and serious condition, and a low-intensity im...
Abstract: BackgroundDigital interventions delivering Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia (Digital CBTi) may increase utilization of effective care for a common and serious condition. A low-intensity im...