| Literature DB >> 28482829 |
Frances Shawyer1, Joanne C Enticott2,3, Lisa Brophy4,5, Annie Bruxner2, Ellie Fossey6, Brett Inder7, John Julian2, Ritsuko Kakuma5, Penelope Weller8, Elisabeth Wilson-Evered9, Vrinda Edan2, Mike Slade10, Graham N Meadows2,3,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recovery features strongly in Australian mental health policy; however, evidence is limited for the efficacy of recovery-oriented practice at the service level. This paper describes the Principles Unite Local Services Assisting Recovery (PULSAR) Specialist Care trial protocol for a recovery-oriented practice training intervention delivered to specialist mental health services staff. The primary aim is to evaluate whether adult consumers accessing services where staff have received the intervention report superior recovery outcomes compared to adult consumers accessing services where staff have not yet received the intervention. A qualitative sub-study aims to examine staff and consumer views on implementing recovery-oriented practice. A process evaluation sub-study aims to articulate important explanatory variables affecting the interventions rollout and outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Co-design; Co-production; Complex Intervention; Mental Health; Psychiatry; Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT); Recovery; Recovery-oriented Practice; Specialist Mental Health Services; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28482829 PMCID: PMC5423029 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-017-1321-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1PULSAR Specialist Care study design and planned timeline
Notes. Indicated at the bottom is the study year. The two-step cluster randomise control trial is shown: half the clusters receive the intervention in step 1 and the remaining clusters receive the intervention in step 2. For a summary of the study evaluations see Table 1
Evaluation plan for the PULSAR Specialist Care study
| Sub-study name | Evaluation | Unit of analysis | Number | Number at each time point | Number in each cluster at each time point | Detectable differences | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome, QPR | Secondary outcome, WEMWBS | Secondary outcome, INSPIRE | |||||||
| cRCT (quantitative data) | Stream 1 (primary analysis) | cross-sectional cRCT (complete step-wedge) | Consumers (mail-out) | 756 | 252 at baseline | 18 | 6.34 (medium effect) | NA | NA |
| Stream 2 | pre- and post-intervention (incomplete step-wedge) | Consumers (interviews) | 252 (stream 1 subset) | 63 at baseline | 9 | 7.68 (medium effect) | 4.80 (medium effect) | 7.72 (medium effect) | |
| Stream 3 | longitudinal, (same participant, 12-mths apart pre- and post-intervention) | Consumers with diagnosis of psychosis (interviews) | 88 (stream 2 subset) | 44 at baseline & step 1 | 6–7 | 10.94 (medium-large effect) | 6.84 (medium-large effect) | 11.28 (medium-large effect) | |
| Nested Qualitative study | Consumers | 20–24 | 10–12 at step 1 | Nested sub-study examining qualitative data collected in study interviews and focus groups | |||||
| Nested Process evaluation | Consumers & staff | The process evaluation assesses a specific set of qualitative, quantitative and documentary data relating to each cluster. | |||||||
Notes. The primary analysis examines the primary outcome– the Questionnaire about the Process of Recovery (QPR) - collected in the two-step stepped-wedge cluster randomized controlled trial (cRCT). A subset of consumers in the cRCT participate in study interviews where secondary outcomes measuring well-being, service satisfaction and health economic impact are collected In a yet another subset in the cRCT, longitudinal data are collected via interviews that are 12 months apart from consumers with a diagnosis of a psychotic disorder. Qualitative and process evaluation sub-studies are nested within the overarching cRCT and include information from consumers and staff.
Cluster sites and stratification factors
| Cluster | Team/service | Organisation | Site | Strata | Team/service description |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 | Crisis assessment & treatment team | Monash Health | 1 | A | Crisis Assessment and Treatment Teams (CATTs) provide urgent assessment and short-term treatment to people in psychiatric crisis and play a key role in triaging admissions to hospital. |
| Cluster 2 | Crisis assessment & treatment team | Monash Health | 2 | A | |
| Cluster 3 | Mobile support and treatment service | Monash Health | 3 | B | Mobile Support and Treatment Teams (MSTs) provide intensive long-term support through assertive outreach to people with prolonged and severe mental illness with associated high levels of disability. |
| Cluster 4 | Mobile support and treatment service | Monash Health | 5 | B | |
| Cluster 5 | Community Mental Health Service | Monash Health | 7 | C | Community Mental Health Service (CMHS) provide non-urgent assessment, treatment, case management, and continuing care support to people living in the community over varying periods of time. |
| Cluster 6 | Community Mental Health Service | Monash Health | 8 | C | |
| Cluster 7 | Continuing Care | Monash Health | 9 | D | Continuing Care Teams (CCTs) provide non-urgent assessment, treatment, case management, and continuing care support to people living in the community over varying periods of time. |
| Cluster 8 | Continuing Care | Monash Health | 10 | D | |
| Cluster 9 | PARC – Adult | Mind Australia | 11 | E | PARC services (including youth, adult and extended PARCs) provide short-term residential support and treatment to assist in averting acute inpatient admission or facilitate earlier discharge. |
| Cluster 10 | PARC – Youth | Mind Australia | 13 | E | |
| Cluster 11 | PARC Ermha | Ermha | 14 | F | |
| Cluster 12 | PARC Ermha | Ermha | 15 | F | |
| Cluster 13 | Community outreach services | Mind Australia | 16 | G | Community Outreach Services provide a range of individualized psychosocial support and recovery services. |
| Cluster 14 | Community outreach services site 1 | Ermha | 17 | G |
Note. Clusters are stratified by the team/service type and composition: i.e. there are seven different strata
Schedule of enrolment, interventions, and assessments
| Time points | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Project events | T0 | T1 | T2 |
| Specialist staff enrolment | |||
| Eligibility screen | X | ||
| Informed consent | X | ||
| Randomization | X | ||
| Intervention | |||
| Year 1 clusters | X | ||
| Year 2 clusters | X | ||
| PALS | |||
| Year 1 clusters | X | X | |
| Year 2 clusters | X | ||
| Consumer recruitment | |||
| Eligibility screen | X | X | X |
| Survey packs to eligible consumers | X | X | X |
| Informed consent | X | X | X |
| Consumer (quantitative) assessment | |||
| cRCT - stream 1 | |||
| Demographics | X | X | X |
| QPR | X | X | X |
| cRCT – streams 2 and 3 | X | X | X |
| WEMWBS | X | X | X |
| INSPIRE | X | X | X |
| PNCQ | X | X | X |
| GAF | X | X | X |
| SOFAS | X | X | X |
| CSQ | X | X | X |
| MASS | X | X | X |
| Coercion Ladder | X | X | X |
| Routinely collected data extracted from service medical files | X | X | |
| Staff qualitative sub-study | |||
| Informed consent | X | X | |
| Individual interview | X | ||
| Individual interview/focus group | X | ||
| Consumer qualitative sub-study | |||
| Informed consent | X | X | |
| Individual interview | X | ||
| Individual interview/focus group | X | ||
| Process evaluation sub-studya | |||
| Examination of specific quantitative & qualitative data in study | X | ||
| Source key study documentary notes | X | ||
| Examine staff training evaluation sheets | X | X | |
Notes. For a description of the T0, T1 and T2 time points, see Fig. 1. For an expansion of cRCT stream acronyms see Table 4
Primary, secondary and other outcome measures
| Quantitative (Consumer) data collected in the cRCT | |
|---|---|
| Primary outcome | 1. Questionnaire about the Process of Recovery (QPR) |
| Secondary outcomes | 2. INSPIRE questionnaire [ |
| Other measures | 4. Participant Demographic Record |
| 15. Routinely collected information in service medical files (data in the year prior to interview): | |
| Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNoS; 12 item clinician-rated measure of social disability) [ | |
| Basis 32 (consumer-rated); | |
| LSP16 (clinician-rated); and Focus of Care (clinician-rated). | |
| Diagnosis information | |
| Number of community/outpatient mental health contacts: | |
| Number of inpatient mental health admissions: | |
| Qualitative (Consumers and staff) sub-study data | |
| Consumer qualitative data | |
| Individual interviews | |
| Focus groups | |
| Staff qualitative data | |
| Individual interviews | |
| Focus groups | |
| Process evaluation sub-study dataa | |
The process sub-study assesses a specific set of study qualitative, quantitative and documentary data relating to each cluster. Includes the data collected from staff after participation in the PULSAR training.
Individual and cluster-level variables available for multivariable analysis
| Variable | Description |
|---|---|
| Individual level | |
| Demographics | |
| Sex | Sex of consumer. |
| Age | Age of consumer at survey completion date. |
| Country of birth | Country of birth of consumer. |
| Year of arrival | Year of arrival in Australia if born overseas |
| Ethnicity | Ethnic or cultural group that the consumer identifies with. |
| Main language | Main language spoken at home. |
| Marital Status | Marital status of consumer. |
| Children | Number and age of any children. |
| Living situation | Current living situation of consumer. |
| Education | Education level of the consumer. |
| Highest qualification | Highest qualification attained by the consumer. |
| Mental health service use | Length of time consumer has used mental health services. |
| Health economics | |
| Employment | Current working status of the consumer. |
| Income | Usual weekly income of consumer, after tax, from all sources of employment and all sources excluding paid work. |
| Days out of role | Number of days in the past month that the consumer was totally or partly unable to carry out normal activities because of mental health problems. |
| Days absent from work | Number of days in the past month that the consumer was absent from work due to illness or disability, and due to mental health problems. |
| Medication information | Prescription and non-prescription medications taken regularly by the consumer. |
| Hospitalizations | Number of hospital admissions for physical problems and for mental health problems, including number of nights in total and reasons for most recent admissions. |
| Consultations with health professionals | Number and length of consultations with health professionals for physical health and mental health problems. |
| Other | ‘Other’ measures that are listed as 9 to 15 in Table |
| Cluster level | |
| Cluster group | Allocated to receive the intervention at either Step 1 or Step 2. |
| Intervention status (0/1) | A lag time of 6 months is anticipated until intervention effects are possible. The intervention status variable indicates that this lag time has passed. |
| Dosage (%) | Intervention dosage. |
| Time since intervention | All data are time-stamped in relation to the time the intervention was received at the cluster. Time value of “0” is given for the plus/minus 3 months from date of training; “1” for 4-to-6 months post training; “2” for 7-to-9 months post training, etc. Time value of “-1” for 4-to-6 months before training; “-2” for 7-to-9 months before training, etc. |
| Time | Study month that survey was completed: “1” = month 1, “2” = month 2, etc. |
| Cluster types - stratification variables, see Table | |
| Crisis assessment & treatment team | |
| Mobile support and treatment service or Community Care Unit | |
| Community Mental Health Service | |
| Continuing Care team | |
| PARC residential facility (Mind Australia) | |
| PARC residential facility (Ermha) | |
| Community outreach service | |