Development and Evaluation of Culturally Adapted CBT for South Asian Canadians
NCT ID: NCT04010890
Last Updated: 2021-07-28
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
140 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-07-26
2022-03-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Canadians of South Asian (SA) origin, defined as individuals with ancestral ties to India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Afghanistan, Maldives and Nepal, comprise the largest racialized group in Canada, amounting to 1.6 million individuals or 5% of the Canadian population and 32% of the Canadian Asian population. This makes them the largest visible minority group in Canada, comprising 25.6% of the visible minority population, followed by East Asian and African-Caribbean Canadians, respectively. The SA Canadians are disproportionately affected by high rates of anxiety and mood disorders, placing those immigrating to Canada at age 17 or younger at a significantly higher risk for this condition compared to immigrants from elsewhere who immigrated at the same age.
The SA Canadians are disproportionately impacted by the social determinants of health, including unemployment, low income, language barriers, low education, low literacy and migration stress. These factors can negatively impact mental health and decrease access to care, thereby increasing mental health inequities. Compared to other ethnocultural groups, SA Canadians with a major depressive episode reported the highest proportion of unmet mental health care needs (48%) and the highest percentage of perceived barriers to the availability of mental health care(33%). Canadians who had a major depressive episode and identified as SA were 85% less likely to seek treatment than Canadians who had experienced the same illness but identified as white. The lower use of mental health services by SA Canadians highlights the inequities in access to appropriate care for these populations.
The Mental Health Commission of Canada (MHCC) recommends improving Canadian mental health care to serve diverse populations with equitable, timely access to appropriate, effective, and evidence-based treatments that attend to unique sociocultural needs (Mental Health Commission of Canada, 2014). The MHCC Case for Diversity report further highlights the necessity for culturally and linguistically relevant services particularly for immigrant, refugee, ethnocultural and racialized populations, such as SA Canadians. In light of the new $5B targeted federal transfer to "improve access to mental health and addiction services and to structured psychotherapy" (Government of Canada, 2016) there is an opportunity to complement efforts to expand the access that adequately address the mental health needs of diverse Canadian populations.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in its current form is not suitable for persons from the non-western cultural background. Culturally-adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (Ca\_CBT) is an evidence-based practice. CaCBT is more effective than standard CBT and can reduce dropouts from therapy compared with standard CBT. Thus CaCBT can increase access to mental health services and improve outcomes for immigrant, refugee, ethnocultural and racialized populations. Adapting CBT for growing SA populations in Canada will ensure equitable access to effective, culturally-appropriate interventions. Accordingly, this study proposes to develop and evaluate Ca\_CBT for depression and anxiety among SA populations in Canada.
Study Objectives:
The primary objective of the study is to develop culturally adapted CBT for South Asian persons with depression and anxiety. Secondary objectives include; (a) testing CaCBT against standard CBT for efficacy and cost-effectiveness, and (b) to test whether training in culturally adapted CBT can improve therapist's cultural competence.
Methods:
This mixed methods study will be conducted in three phases:
Phase 1: Cultural Adaptation of CBT Cultural adaptation of CBT for SA populations in Canada experiencing depression and anxiety using stakeholder consultations and qualitative methodology
Phase 2: Pilot Feasibility Testing of Ca\_CBT Pilot test the newly developed Ca\_CBT for feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness via quantitative methodology and a randomized controlled trial
Phase 3: Implementation \& Evaluation of Ca\_CBT Trained therapists working with SA populations to use Ca\_CBT with their clients. Evaluate therapist competence in using Ca\_CBT as well as client satisfaction with the newly developed therapy.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
1. Development of culturally adapted CBT for Canadian South Asians through a qualitative study
2. Testing culturally adapted CBT against standard CBT for efficacy through RCT and economic evaluation
3. Evaluation of training of therapists in culturally adapted CBT
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Culturally adapted CBT
Ca\_CBT will be delivered to the experimental group using the newly developed manual . The intervention will be delivered over 8-12 sessions. The Control group will receive standard CBT
Culturally adapted CBT
Culturally adapted CBT for South Asian Canadians
Standard CBT
Participants in this group will receive standard CBT
Culturally adapted CBT
Culturally adapted CBT for South Asian Canadians
Interventions
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Culturally adapted CBT
Culturally adapted CBT for South Asian Canadians
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. who score 8 or more on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) Depression Subscale Or on Anxiety Subscale, will be included in the study.
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Farooq Naeem
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Bruce Pollock
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
Center for Addiction and Mental Health
Locations
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Somerset West Mental Health Services
Ottawa, , Canada
Punjabi Health
Toronto, , Canada
Moving Forward
Vancouver, , Canada
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Azaad Kassam
Role: primary
Puneet Dhillon
Role: primary
gary Thandi
Role: primary
References
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Naeem F, Tuck A, Mutta B, Dhillon P, Thandi G, Kassam A, Farah N, Ashraf A, Husain MI, Husain MO, Vasiliadis HM, Sanches M, Munshi T, Abbott M, Watters N, Kidd SA, Ayub M, McKenzie K. Protocol for a multi-phase, mixed methods study to develop and evaluate culturally adapted CBT to improve community mental health services for Canadians of south Asian origin. Trials. 2021 Sep 6;22(1):600. doi: 10.1186/s13063-021-05547-4.
Other Identifiers
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CAddictionMH
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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