Horyzons: Implementation and Integration in Clinical Practice
SchizophreniaSchizophreniform Disorders2 moreThe primary aim of this trial is evaluating the barriers and enablers of implementing a digital intervention with both therapeutic content and social networking, Horyzons, as part of clinical care in first episode psychosis (FEP) clinics in North Carolina. Providers (clinicians and peers support specialists) will be recruited from FEP clinics to assess Horyzons implementation and integration within clinical care at three time points (baseline, 6 months, and 12 months). Further, individuals experiencing FEP between the ages of 16 and 35 receiving services from the FEP clinics will be recruited to engage with the platform over the course of 12 months. Due to the nature of the digital intervention being implemented across the state of North Carolina, all research visits will be conducted remotely via videoconferencing.
Strengthening Care in Collaboration With People With Lived Experience of Psychosis in Uganda
PsychosisBackground: Mental health services are most effective and equitable when designed, delivered, and evaluated in collaboration with people with lived experience of mental health conditions. Unfortunately, people with lived experience are rarely involved in health systems strengthening or are limited to specific components (e.g., peer helpers) rather than multi-tiered collaboration in the continuum of health services (e.g., ranging from home- to community- to clinic-based services). Moreover, programs that do involve people with lived experience, typically involve people with a history of a substance use conditions or common mental disorders. In contrast, the collaboration of people with lived experience of psychosis is especially rare. A pilot cluster randomized controlled trial will be conducted in urban and peri-urban areas around Kampala, Uganda, to evaluate the benefits of an implementation strategy for mental health services with engagement of people with lived experience of psychosis throughout the home-to-community-to-clinic care continuum, this is a hybrid type-III implementation-effectiveness pilot focusing on the differences in implementation strategy. This implementation strategy, entitled "Strengthening CAre in collaboration with People with lived Experience of psychosis in Uganda", will include training people with lived experience of psychosis using PhotoVoice and other methods to participate at three levels: in-home services, community engagement, and primary health care facilities. The investigators will compare a standard task-sharing implementation arm using training by mental health specialists with an experimental implementation arm that includes collaboration with people with lived experience. The primary objective is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of this strategy in the context of assuring safety and wellbeing of people with lived experience of psychosis who collaborate in health systems strengthening. By collaborating on health systems strengthening across these multiple levels, we foresee a more in-depth contribution that can lead to rethinking how best to design and deliver care for people with lived experience of psychosis. Successful completion of this pilot will be the foundation for a fully powered trial to evaluate the benefits of multi-level collaboration with people with lived experience of psychosis.
Using Digital Media Advertising to Reduce the Duration of Untreated Psychosis
SchizophreniaFirst Episode PsychosisThere is compelling evidence that longer duration of untreated psychosis independently predicts negative outcomes. The proposal aims to explore whether targeted and proactive online outreach through search engine advertisements, coupled with engaging, informative, and interactive online resources, can effectively reduce the duration of untreated psychosis and facilitate earlier treatment initiation in New York State. Results from this initiative will be critical to informing the subsequent design and conduct of larger, focused, and proactive digital media campaigns targeting patient with FEP and their caregivers online, intended to accelerate linkage to care and reduce the duration of untreated psychosis throughout the U.S.
Non-Pharmacological Treatment of Psychosis
Psychosis; Schizophrenia-LikeThe objectives of the project are to investigate feasibility, safety, and health-related outcomes in patients with psychosis who choose not to use antipsychotic drugs (APs). The instruction from the Ministry of Health and Care Services to establish "Medication Free" (non-pharmacological (NonPharm)) treatment services, which has received substantial critique for being given without support in scientific evidence, provides a window of opportunity for research in an under-investigated field. The study will prospectively follow a cohort over 1 year who seeks NonPharm treatment, with repeated measurements of symptoms, functional outcomes, quality of life, adverse events, as well as biological parameters including genetics and brain imaging, and environmental factors, and compare the findings to a control group of users of antipsychotic drugs, matched for age, gender and diagnosis. Current unanswered questions in the treatment of psychosis include which patients can successfully and safely discontinue antipsychotic medication; and what are the long-term symptomatic, biological and functional outcomes after use or non-use of APs, respectively. Taken together there is a fundamental lack of high-quality evidence to guide the treatment options in people who cannot or do not want to use APs in psychosis. This is also a major challenge in the study, as a more rigorous design that could directly compare different treatment options is not feasible, because no alternatives to APs have proven to be sufficiently effective and safe in controlled trials. The study is accordingly expected to provide new exploratory information that could be the basis of intervention studies which in its turn could provide important information for consumers and the mental health services regarding treatment options in psychosis.
Youth Nominated Support Team
PsychosisSuicide2 moreThis study aims to adapt the current Youth-Nominated Support Team (YST) manual used to treat suicide risk for people at clinical high risk for psychosis.
Pilot Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of Online Familiar Metacognitive Training (MCTf)
PsychosisMother-Child RelationsThe objective of this study is to adapt and evaluate the efficacy of Familiar Metacognitive Training (MCTf) in mothers and adolescent children in a group context with the main purpose of improving family relationships, cognitive awareness and symptoms of women with psychosis and the knowledge of the disease by the children. Secondary objectives: to evaluate the improvement in metacognition and social cognition, symptoms, protective factors and self-perception of stigma.
Peer Approaches to Substances in Early Psychosis Programs: A Pilot Study of a Peer-Led Intervention...
Psychotic DisordersSubstance UseThe aim of the study is to pilot a peer-provided, manualized intervention to increase the proportion of young people with first episode psychosis who reduce or stop substance use and improve psychiatric and functional outcomes. Coordinated specialty care teams will be randomly assigned to implement the intervention, Peer Approaches to Substances in Early Psychosis Programs (PAS-EPP), or usual care. The pilot study aims to: (a) determine if peer providers can implement PAS-EPP with adequate fidelity; (b) determine if youth and young adults engage in the intervention with peer providers and find it acceptable; (c) estimate the rates of drop-out for each of the two study arms; (d) estimate both between-participant (within-provider team) and between-team variability on key outcome measures; and (e) identify any changes needed to the intervention approach, manual, or training materials. The pilot study will set the stage for a future comparative cluster randomized trial of the intervention;
Efficiency of a Composite Personalised Care on Functional Outcome in Early Psychosis
PsychosisChronic psychosis, including schizophrenia is now viewed as a progressive disorder where cognitive deficits predate the clinical onset. Early intervention programs improve the general outcome with staged care strategies, supporting the view that the period before and around the first episode of psychosis is a window of opportunity for improving its functional recovery. Pioneering epigenetic analyses indicate that psychosis onset involves oxidative stress and inflammation suggesting that neuroprotective strategies could limit or even prevent the onset of or the transition into a chronic disorder. Several biological factors associated with the emergence of psychosis can all be rectified by using safe and easily accepted supplements including alterations folate deficiency/hyperhomocysteinemia; redox imbalance and deficit in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). The prevalence of these anomalies (20-30%) justifies a systematic detection and could guide personalised add-on strategy. Cognitive remediation improves quality of life (QoL) and functional outcome in patients with chronic psychosis. It would even be more efficacious in the early phase of psychosis by tackling the negative impact of psychosis on education achievement and employment. However, cognitive dysfunctions are often overlooked in patients at ultra-high risk (UHR) for psychosis and patient with a first episode of psychosis (FEP) and cognitive remediation is not always accessible. New technologies can provide us with youth-friendly, non-stigmatising tools, such as applications with cognitive strategies, motivational tools and functioning guidance personalised according to the need of each individual. Patients can have access to it, wherever they live. Early psychosis can be associated with inflammation, metabolic deficiency, as well as early structural brain anomalies that reflect brain plasticity abilities and could influence the prognosis and response to cognitive training. The study hypothesis is that promoting neuroplasticity by cognitive training and personalised virtual psychoeducation guidance could attenuate or reverse early cognitive deficits and improve the overall functional outcome in young patients UHR or FEP and that this effect is modulated by individual brain plasticity abilities. The overall objective of PsyCARE_trial is to improve early intervention in psychosis by providing a composite personalised care (CPC) that will enable personalised cognitive training and psychoeducation guidance, adapted to individuals' needs, cognitive abilities and biological background.
Cognitive Effects of Adjuvant Vortioxetine in Early Schizophrenia
Cognitive Impairment With Primary Psychotic DisorderNegative Symptoms With Primary Psychotic DisorderClinical trial to assess the efficacy of Vortioxetine compared with treatment as usual in early schizophrenia.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy-Informed Groups for Psychosis
PsychosisThis is a feasibility study of cognitive behavioural therapy-informed groups for psychiatric inpatients with positive symptoms of psychosis.