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Integrating Mindfulness Into the Patient-Centered Medical Home (Phase 2) (MINDFUL-PC-2)

Primary Purpose

Depression, Anxiety, Stress Related Disorder

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
United States
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Mindfulness Training for Primary Care
60-minute Introduction to Mindfulness
Sponsored by
Cambridge Health Alliance
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional treatment trial for Depression

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - undefined (Adult, Older Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Current CHA patient with an enrolled CHA primary care doctor.
  • CHA patients 18 years of age and older.
  • Able to tolerate and participate in interviews and engage in all procedures.
  • Able to give written consent in English OR willing and able to provide consent and complete assessments through a professional language translator when necessary.
  • Diagnosis eligible to be covered by insurance for group visits (e.g., anxiety disorder, depression, or adjustment disorder related to chronic illness, pain, etc.).

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Any cognitive impairment that precludes informed consent.
  • Patients who, in the opinion of the Principal Investigator, pose an imminent risk of suicide or danger to self or others.
  • Likelihood of potential incarceration such as a conviction or pending charges that may potentially result in imprisonment.
  • Previous enrollment or randomization of treatment in the present study within the 12 months.
  • Behaviors that may cause disruption to a mindfulness group.
  • Patients with symptoms of psychosis, thought disorder, and/or severe mental illness, including schizophrenia, schizoaffective, bipolar disorder, or a current severe episode of major depressive disorder.
  • Lack of insurance coverage for group psychotherapy may preclude participation in groups.
  • Patients in their third trimester of pregnancy who foresee conflicts that preclude their commitment to completing all activities.
  • Patients with highly unstable medical problems that put them at a high risk of hospitalization.

Sites / Locations

  • Cambridge Health Alliance

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Active Comparator

Other

Arm Label

Mindfulness Training for Primary Care

Low-dose Comparator

Arm Description

Mindfulness Training for Primary Care (MTPC) is a primary care adaptation that includes core common Mindfulness-Based Intervention (MBI) elements integrated with novel mindfulness-oriented behavior change elements into a format that is adaptable to delivery in primary care health centers.

Comparator arm: Participants receive a 60-minute introduction to mindfulness group plus referral to a list of community mindfulness resources such as private-pay community mindfulness classes, mobile mindfulness applications, books, and online recordings. These participants are added to a 6-month wait-list for a Cambridge Health Alliance mindfulness-based intervention group and allowed to receive behavioral and medical referrals and treatment as usual. All participants complete an action planning protocol during Week 7.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Action Plan Initiation Survey (APIS-5)
The Action Plan Initiation Survey (APIS-5) is a 5-item self-report questionnaire adapted from a measure used by Guck et al. Participants are asked to indicate how successful they were in meeting a previously set Action Plan by using a 7-point Likert scale from 1 (Not met at all) to 7 (Totally met), with a score of 5 or above indicating successful initiation of the goal. For each unmet goal, patients are asked to further rate the cause of not meeting the goal by using a 7-point Likert rating scale from 1 (Extremely controllable) to 7 (Not at all controllable). For this outcome we reported the number of participants in each arm who successfully initiated an Action Plan, as indicated by a score of 5 or above in reporting whether they were able to meet their action plan goal.
Perceived Stress Scale
The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) (10 items) measures the degree to which situations in life are stressful. Items are designed to evaluate how overloaded, unpredictable, and uncontrollable one finds one's life. Each item is scored on a 5 point Likert scale from 0 (Never) to 4 (Very often). Scores range from 0-40 with higher scores reflecting worse results (more stress).
Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Anxiety Short Form (PROMIS-ASF)
The Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Anxiety Short Form 8a (PROMIS-ASF) is an 8-item scale used to assess patient-reported health status for anxiety. PROMIS instruments are funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and used to reliably and validly measure patient-reported outcomes for clinical research and practice. Participants are asked to rate their experience of the item in the past seven days on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Never) to 5 (Always). The values of the response to each question are summed into a raw score ranging from 8-40. The raw score is then rescaled with use of the PROMIS Assessment Center Scoring Service into a T score, a standardized score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. Higher T-Score reflects worse results (greater symptom severity).
Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Depression Short Form (PROMIS-DSF)
The Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Depression Short Form 8a (PROMIS-DSF) is an 8-item scale used to assess patient-reported health status for depression. PROMIS instruments are funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and used to reliably and validly measure patient-reported outcomes for clinical research and practice. Participants are asked to rate their experience of the item in the past seven days on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Never) to 5 (Always). The values of the response to each question are summed into a raw score ranging from 8-40. The raw score is then rescaled with use of the PROMIS Assessment Center Scoring Service into a T score, a standardized score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. Higher T-Score reflects reflect worse results (greater symptom severity).

Secondary Outcome Measures

Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ)
The Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) is a 39-item scale that examines five factors that represent aspects of the current empirical conception of mindfulness. These five facets include: "observing, describing, acting with awareness, non-judging of inner experience, and non-reactivity to inner experience." Participants rate their degree of agreement with each of the items on a Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (Never or very rarely true) to 5 (Very often or always true). Facet scores range from 8-40, with the exception of the nonreactivity facet, which ranges from 7-35. Total scores range from 39-195, with higher scores reflecting higher levels of mindfulness (a better outcome).
Self-Compassion Scale-Short Form (SCS-SF)
The short-form Self-Compassion Scale (SCS-SF) is an abbreviated 12-item form of the original 26-item Self-Compassion Scale. The scale is scored on a 5 point Likert scale (1 = Almost never; 5 = Almost always), and negative subscale items are reverse scored, with higher scores indicating greater levels of self-compassion.
Change in Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Disease (SECD-6)
The Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Disease Scale (SECD-6) is a 6-item scale that is used to evaluate a participant's ability to self-manage care for a chronic disease. SECD-6 asks participants to rate their confidence in their own ability to do certain activities, on a scale from 1 (not at all confident) to 10 (totally confident). Higher scores indicate better results (higher levels of self-efficacy).
Perceived Control Questionnaire (PCQ)
The Perceived Control Questionnaire (PCQ) is adapted from a 5-item perceived control measure from Jerant et al. and a previously validated survey from Armitage et al. This 5-item scale asks participants to rate their sense of control over chronic illness self-management on a 7-point scale from 1 (None) to 7 (Total). Scores range from 5-35, with higher scores indicating better results (greater sense of control).
Difficulty in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS)
The Difficulties in Emotion Regulation (DERS) Scale is a 36-item self-report scale designed to assess emotional dysregulation. Participants are asked to rate how often they have emotional dysregulation on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (almost never [0-10%]) to 5 (almost always [91-100%]). The scale assess 6 aspects of emotional dysregulation: non-acceptance of emotional responses, difficulties engaging in goal directed behavior, impulse control difficulties, lack of emotional awareness (reverse-scored), limited access to emotion regulation strategies, and lack of emotional clarity. Total scores range from 5-180, with higher scores indicating worse results (more difficulty in emotional regulation).
Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA)
The Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA) is a 32-item self-report scale designed to assess 8 aspects of interoceptive awareness : noticing, not-distracting, not-worrying, attention regulation, emotional awareness, self-regulation, body listening, and trusting. Participants are asked to rate their awareness of interoceptive experiences on a 6-point Likert scale from 0 (Never) to 5 (Always). Each subscale has 3-7 items, and scores are obtained by reverse coding items 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and then taking the average of items in each scale. Scores range from 0-5, with higher scores indicating better results (greater interoception).

Full Information

First Posted
August 28, 2017
Last Updated
November 11, 2020
Sponsor
Cambridge Health Alliance
Collaborators
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, The Arnold P. Gold Foundation, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Brown University, National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH)
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03265600
Brief Title
Integrating Mindfulness Into the Patient-Centered Medical Home (Phase 2)
Acronym
MINDFUL-PC-2
Official Title
MINDFUL-PC: Integrating Mindfulness Into the Patient-Centered Medical Home - A Comparative Effectiveness Trial of Chronic Illness Self-Management and Action Plan Initiation Among Primary Care Patients
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
November 2020
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
February 1, 2017 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
September 15, 2018 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
August 1, 2020 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Cambridge Health Alliance
Collaborators
The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, The Arnold P. Gold Foundation, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Brown University, National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH)

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Among primary care patients, compare the effectiveness of an 8-week mindfulness-based intervention (Mindfulness Training for Primary Care[MTPC]) vs. a low-dose mindfulness introduction comparator on self-management of chronic illness and illness-related health behavior action plan initiation, as well as on measures related to anxiety, depression, and stress.
Detailed Description
This study builds on a pilot study that investigated the impact of Mindfulness Training for Primary Care on anxiety, depression, stress, and chronic illness self-management in primary care patients receiving care in an urban, community, multi-cultural safety net healthcare system. The current comparative effectiveness randomized controlled trial takes place in a larger sample, and investigates the impact of a refined MTPC curriculum on specific aspects of self-regulation such as action plan initiation, while examining potential mechanisms of change, including self-efficacy, perceived control, mindfulness, self-compassion, emotion regulation, and body awareness. Participants randomized to MTPC are compared with participants who are randomized to a low-dose comparator condition and receive a 1-hour introduction to mindfulness with a referral to community mindfulness resources. Outcome assessments are conducted at baseline and study weeks 8-10.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Depression, Anxiety, Stress Related Disorder, Adjustment Disorders

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Treatment
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
Two arms, intervention and low-dose comparator, which are randomly assigned at the same time and are implemented in parallel.
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
136 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Mindfulness Training for Primary Care
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Mindfulness Training for Primary Care (MTPC) is a primary care adaptation that includes core common Mindfulness-Based Intervention (MBI) elements integrated with novel mindfulness-oriented behavior change elements into a format that is adaptable to delivery in primary care health centers.
Arm Title
Low-dose Comparator
Arm Type
Other
Arm Description
Comparator arm: Participants receive a 60-minute introduction to mindfulness group plus referral to a list of community mindfulness resources such as private-pay community mindfulness classes, mobile mindfulness applications, books, and online recordings. These participants are added to a 6-month wait-list for a Cambridge Health Alliance mindfulness-based intervention group and allowed to receive behavioral and medical referrals and treatment as usual. All participants complete an action planning protocol during Week 7.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Mindfulness Training for Primary Care
Intervention Description
MTPC is a referral-based, insurance-reimbursable 8-week program that can be delivered as group psychotherapy by Patient-Centered Medical Home-integrated behavioral clinicians or as an 8-week primary care group visit delivered by a primary care provider. MTPC groups are 2 hours long for 8 weeks with a 7-hour weekend day of silent practice. MTPC emphasizes mindfulness-oriented skills for self-regulation, self-management of chronic illness, and health behavior change. All participants complete an action planning protocol during Week 7.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
60-minute Introduction to Mindfulness
Intervention Description
Participants in the low-dose comparator arm receive a 60-minute introduction to mindfulness. Participants are introduced to the definition(s) of mindfulness, brief mindfulness practices, discussion, and an orientation to an 8-week mindfulness group. They are also given a list of leading community, online, print, and smartphone mindfulness resources.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Action Plan Initiation Survey (APIS-5)
Description
The Action Plan Initiation Survey (APIS-5) is a 5-item self-report questionnaire adapted from a measure used by Guck et al. Participants are asked to indicate how successful they were in meeting a previously set Action Plan by using a 7-point Likert scale from 1 (Not met at all) to 7 (Totally met), with a score of 5 or above indicating successful initiation of the goal. For each unmet goal, patients are asked to further rate the cause of not meeting the goal by using a 7-point Likert rating scale from 1 (Extremely controllable) to 7 (Not at all controllable). For this outcome we reported the number of participants in each arm who successfully initiated an Action Plan, as indicated by a score of 5 or above in reporting whether they were able to meet their action plan goal.
Time Frame
Weeks 8-10
Title
Perceived Stress Scale
Description
The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) (10 items) measures the degree to which situations in life are stressful. Items are designed to evaluate how overloaded, unpredictable, and uncontrollable one finds one's life. Each item is scored on a 5 point Likert scale from 0 (Never) to 4 (Very often). Scores range from 0-40 with higher scores reflecting worse results (more stress).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Anxiety Short Form (PROMIS-ASF)
Description
The Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Anxiety Short Form 8a (PROMIS-ASF) is an 8-item scale used to assess patient-reported health status for anxiety. PROMIS instruments are funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and used to reliably and validly measure patient-reported outcomes for clinical research and practice. Participants are asked to rate their experience of the item in the past seven days on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Never) to 5 (Always). The values of the response to each question are summed into a raw score ranging from 8-40. The raw score is then rescaled with use of the PROMIS Assessment Center Scoring Service into a T score, a standardized score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. Higher T-Score reflects worse results (greater symptom severity).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Depression Short Form (PROMIS-DSF)
Description
The Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Depression Short Form 8a (PROMIS-DSF) is an 8-item scale used to assess patient-reported health status for depression. PROMIS instruments are funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and used to reliably and validly measure patient-reported outcomes for clinical research and practice. Participants are asked to rate their experience of the item in the past seven days on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Never) to 5 (Always). The values of the response to each question are summed into a raw score ranging from 8-40. The raw score is then rescaled with use of the PROMIS Assessment Center Scoring Service into a T score, a standardized score with a mean of 50 and a standard deviation (SD) of 10. Higher T-Score reflects reflect worse results (greater symptom severity).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ)
Description
The Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) is a 39-item scale that examines five factors that represent aspects of the current empirical conception of mindfulness. These five facets include: "observing, describing, acting with awareness, non-judging of inner experience, and non-reactivity to inner experience." Participants rate their degree of agreement with each of the items on a Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (Never or very rarely true) to 5 (Very often or always true). Facet scores range from 8-40, with the exception of the nonreactivity facet, which ranges from 7-35. Total scores range from 39-195, with higher scores reflecting higher levels of mindfulness (a better outcome).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Self-Compassion Scale-Short Form (SCS-SF)
Description
The short-form Self-Compassion Scale (SCS-SF) is an abbreviated 12-item form of the original 26-item Self-Compassion Scale. The scale is scored on a 5 point Likert scale (1 = Almost never; 5 = Almost always), and negative subscale items are reverse scored, with higher scores indicating greater levels of self-compassion.
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Change in Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Disease (SECD-6)
Description
The Self-Efficacy for Managing Chronic Disease Scale (SECD-6) is a 6-item scale that is used to evaluate a participant's ability to self-manage care for a chronic disease. SECD-6 asks participants to rate their confidence in their own ability to do certain activities, on a scale from 1 (not at all confident) to 10 (totally confident). Higher scores indicate better results (higher levels of self-efficacy).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Perceived Control Questionnaire (PCQ)
Description
The Perceived Control Questionnaire (PCQ) is adapted from a 5-item perceived control measure from Jerant et al. and a previously validated survey from Armitage et al. This 5-item scale asks participants to rate their sense of control over chronic illness self-management on a 7-point scale from 1 (None) to 7 (Total). Scores range from 5-35, with higher scores indicating better results (greater sense of control).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Difficulty in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS)
Description
The Difficulties in Emotion Regulation (DERS) Scale is a 36-item self-report scale designed to assess emotional dysregulation. Participants are asked to rate how often they have emotional dysregulation on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (almost never [0-10%]) to 5 (almost always [91-100%]). The scale assess 6 aspects of emotional dysregulation: non-acceptance of emotional responses, difficulties engaging in goal directed behavior, impulse control difficulties, lack of emotional awareness (reverse-scored), limited access to emotion regulation strategies, and lack of emotional clarity. Total scores range from 5-180, with higher scores indicating worse results (more difficulty in emotional regulation).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)
Title
Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA)
Description
The Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA) is a 32-item self-report scale designed to assess 8 aspects of interoceptive awareness : noticing, not-distracting, not-worrying, attention regulation, emotional awareness, self-regulation, body listening, and trusting. Participants are asked to rate their awareness of interoceptive experiences on a 6-point Likert scale from 0 (Never) to 5 (Always). Each subscale has 3-7 items, and scores are obtained by reverse coding items 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and then taking the average of items in each scale. Scores range from 0-5, with higher scores indicating better results (greater interoception).
Time Frame
Baseline and week 8 (pre to post Intervention)

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Current CHA patient with an enrolled CHA primary care doctor. CHA patients 18 years of age and older. Able to tolerate and participate in interviews and engage in all procedures. Able to give written consent in English OR willing and able to provide consent and complete assessments through a professional language translator when necessary. Diagnosis eligible to be covered by insurance for group visits (e.g., anxiety disorder, depression, or adjustment disorder related to chronic illness, pain, etc.). Exclusion Criteria: Any cognitive impairment that precludes informed consent. Patients who, in the opinion of the Principal Investigator, pose an imminent risk of suicide or danger to self or others. Likelihood of potential incarceration such as a conviction or pending charges that may potentially result in imprisonment. Previous enrollment or randomization of treatment in the present study within the 12 months. Behaviors that may cause disruption to a mindfulness group. Patients with symptoms of psychosis, thought disorder, and/or severe mental illness, including schizophrenia, schizoaffective, bipolar disorder, or a current severe episode of major depressive disorder. Lack of insurance coverage for group psychotherapy may preclude participation in groups. Patients in their third trimester of pregnancy who foresee conflicts that preclude their commitment to completing all activities. Patients with highly unstable medical problems that put them at a high risk of hospitalization.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Zev D Schuman-Olivier, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Cambridge Health Alliance
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Cambridge Health Alliance
City
Somerville
State/Province
Massachusetts
ZIP/Postal Code
02143
Country
United States

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
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Integrating Mindfulness Into the Patient-Centered Medical Home (Phase 2)

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