| Literature DB >> 31641001 |
Sylvanna Maria Vargas1,2,3, Ashley Wennerstrom4,5, Nancy Alfaro2, Thomas Belin2,6, Krystal Griffith2, Catherine Haywood7,8, Felica Jones9, Mitchell R Lunn10,11, Diana Meyers12, Jeanne Miranda2,13, Juno Obedin-Maliver10,11, Miranda Pollock14, Cathy D Sherbourne15, Benjamin F Springgate14, Olivia K Sugarman14,16,17, Emily Rey18,19, Clarence Williams9, Pluscedia Williams9,20, Bowen Chung2,15,21,22.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Depression is the leading cause of adult disability and common among sexual and gender minority (SGM) adults. The current study builds on findings showing the effectiveness of depression quality improvement (QI) and delivery of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) skills provided by community health workers in reducing depression. Depression QI approaches across healthcare and social/community services in safety-net settings have shown improvements in mental wellness, mental health quality of life and depression over 12 months. Further, a randomised study showed improved depression among low-income racial/ethnic minorities enrolled in a CBT-informed resiliency class (Building Resilience and Increasing Community Hope (B-RICH)). The current protocol describes a comparativeness effectiveness study to evaluate whether predominantly low-income, SGM racial/ethnic minority adults randomised to a CBT-informed resiliency class have improvements in depressive symptoms over and above community-engaged QI resources and training only. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The study approached three clusters of four to five programs serving predominantly SGM and racial/ethnic minority communities in the USA: two clusters in Los Angeles, California, and one in New Orleans, Louisiana. Clusters are comprised of one primary care, one mental health and two to three community agencies (eg, faith-based, social services/support, advocacy). All programs received depression QI training. The current study employed a community-partnered participatory research model to adapt the CBT-informed resiliency class, B-RICH+, to SGM communities. Study participants were screened and recruited in person from participating programs, and will complete baseline, 6- and 12-month survey follow-ups. Participants were depressed adults (8-item Patient Health Questionnaire ≥10; ≥18 years of age) who provided contact information. Enrolled participants were individually randomised to B-RICH+ or depression QI alone. Primary outcomes are depressive symptoms; secondary outcomes are mental health quality of life, mental wellness and physical health quality of life. Data collection for this study is ongoing. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The current study was approved by the UCLA Institutional Review Board. Study findings will be disseminated through scientific publications and community conferences. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02986126. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: LGBTQ; SGM; community partnered research; depression and mood disorders; racial/ ethnic minorities
Year: 2019 PMID: 31641001 PMCID: PMC6830623 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-031099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study overview illustrating recruitment, study enrolment and randomisation, data collection waves and study outcomes. B-RICH+, Building Resilience and Increasing Community Hope+; LGBTQ, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer; PHQ-8, 8-item Patient Health Questionnaire.
Overview of study measures
| Domain assesse | Reference | Survey measure | Number of items per measure | Screener | Baseline | 6 month follow-up | 12 month follow-up |
| Age | – | Age | 1 | X | |||
| Level of education | – | Education | 1 | X | |||
| Income | – | Income | 4 | X | |||
| Marital status | – | Marital status | 1 | ||||
| Language | – | Language | 1 | X | |||
| Housing | – | Housing | 1 | X | |||
| Employment | – | Employment | 13 | X | X | X | X |
| Number of children living in household | – | Number of children (<18) living in household | 1 | X | |||
| Sexual orientation |
| Sexual orientation | 1 | X | |||
| Sexual behaviour |
| Sexual behaviour | 1 | X | |||
| Sex assigned at birth |
| Sex assigned on birth certificate | 1 | X | |||
| Gender identity |
| Current gender identity | Gender identity | 1 | X | ||
| Race/ethnicity | – | Current racial/ethnic identity | 1 | X | |||
| Insured status | – | Insurance status | 1 | X | X | X | |
| Depressive disorders |
| CAT-MH (depression module with DSM-5 specifier) | Max of 94 questions; module was adaptive | X | X | X | |
| Bipolar disorder |
| CAT-MH (mania module) | Max of 11 questions; module was adaptive | X | |||
| Generalised anxiety disorder |
| CAT-MH (anxiety module) | Max 13 questions; module was adaptive | X | |||
| Suicidality |
| CAT-MH (suicide module) | Max of 3 questions; module was adaptive | X | X | X | |
| Psychosis |
| Single item inquiring about schizophrenia diagnosis | 1 | X | X | ||
| PTSD |
| PTSD checklist for DSM-5 | 4 | X | X | ||
| Chronic medical conditions |
| MOS 36 | 18 | X | |||
| HIV testing status |
| HIV testing status | 8 | X | X | ||
| Stressful life events |
| Stressful life events | 15 | X | X | X | |
| Social support |
| Social support | 10 | X | X | X | |
| Everyday discrimination scale |
| Discrimination | 16 | X | X | ||
| Internalised homonegativity |
| Internalised homophobia | 6 | X | X | ||
| Outness Scale |
| Outness to social circle | 18 | X | X | ||
| Use of alcohol/drugs |
| Alcohol/drug use | 14 | X | X | ||
| General hospital services |
| General health services | 13 | X | X | X | |
| Mental health services | Mental health services | 7 | X | X | X | ||
| Substance abuse services | Substance abuse services | 6 | X | X | X | ||
| Social & community-based services for depression/mental health | Community-based services | 7 | X | X | X | ||
| Psychotropic medication |
| Medications | 25 | X | X | X | |
| Depressive symptoms (8-item patient health questionnaire score) |
| Depression symptoms | 8 | X | X | X | X |
| Mental wellness |
| MHI-5, MOS 36 | 4 | X | X | X | |
| Mental health |
| SF-12 -functioning | 15 | X | X | X |
CAT-MH, Computerised Adaptive Test-Mental Health; MCS, mental composite score; MHI, Mental Health Inventory; MOS, Medical Outcomes Study; PCS, physical composite score; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; SF-12, 12-item short-form health survey.