Happy@Home: Delivering iCBT With Homecare Workers to At-Home Seniors
NCT ID: NCT04267289
Last Updated: 2020-05-11
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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COMPLETED
NA
28 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-05-30
2020-03-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Online therapy (iCBT) is an evidence-based approach for treating depression. Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the gold standard of psychotherapy for depression in both young and older adults. Internet-based CBT (iCBT) delivers CBT via d websites or dedicated apps on mobile devices or tablets. iCBT can be self-administered or guided by a therapist. Its strengths include low-cost, accessibility, and ability to tailor to individual needs while maintaining fidelity. Meta-analyses have shown that iCBT is equivalent to face-to-face CBT in its effectiveness for treating depression. Emerging evidence suggests that iCBT may actually be more effective for older adults, because they are more likely to adhere to treatment than their younger counterparts. Despite the benefits of iCBT, most older adults do not use iCBT, possibly due to limited opportunities accessing iCBT programs and technological challenges.
This project explores the feasibility of implementing iCBT in non-skilled home care. Home care workers provide personal care and companionship to older adults in need of assistance with daily activities, housekeeping, medication management, and transportation. Home care is provided full-time, part-time, intermittently, or even around the clock to address the recipient's long-term care needs. Home-based care provides a naturalized and accessible setting, and frequent home visits over an extended period offer opportunities for prolonged engagement and symptom monitoring. Research shows that iCBT programs with human support are more effective than self-guided programs. For at-home seniors, home care workers represent an untapped resource of human support and can be trained to provide technical assistance for at-home seniors with limited computer literacy, addressing technological challenges associated with iCBT use. Moreover, home care workers can facilitate the completion of behavioral activation activities (e.g., drive a client to attend a social activity), which is critical in realizing the effectiveness of CBT. In addition, participation in training and intervention may also benefit the home care workers themselves by improving job satisfaction, pride, and retention. However, Studies have not tested iCBT with at-home seniors receiving home care. Protocols for implementing iCBT in home care also do not exist. Issues regarding screening, supervision, and referrals need to be addressed and standardized. In addition, we need to develop strategies to address implementation barriers at the patient, provider, and organization levels to achieve sustained impact.
This pilot feasibility study is a pragmatic trial of iCBT among a sample of diverse at-home seniors receiving non-skilled home care. Guided by the Replicating Effective Programs framework, this study aims to develop materials to package an existing, evidence-based iCBT program called Beating the Blues for testing in a sample of at-home seniors receiving home care. The primary aim of the study is to test whether iCBT is an acceptable treatment modality for at-home seniors with varying levels of technology competency. An exploratory aim is to examine whether it is feasible to train home care workers to assist seniors with iCBT completion. Findings from this pilot study will gather information regarding barriers to implement iCBT in non-skilled home care at the provider- (home care workers) and the patient- (at-home seniors) levels. If the results from this study are promising, subsequent efforts will be devoted to address implementation barriers at the organizational (home care agencies) level.
The study is a single-group open trial. Study materials (measurements, participant workbook) will be piloted tested with 2 subjects, who will not participate in the full trial. The targeted sample size for the full trial is 28. A sample size of 23 provides a power of 0.95 to detect a significant effect size of d=.8 from paired-sample t-test (G\*Power, 3.1 version). A proposed sample size of 28 therefore has sufficient power to detect the projected effect size.
Study subjects will be recruited from home-care agencies, meals-on-wheels, and senior apartment buildings in Ann Arbor and surrounding areas.
After being screened and consented, subjects will receive a comprehensive baseline assessment. Subjects have the choice of receiving assistance from their home care worker, assistance from a member of the research team, or work on the iCBT program on their own. If subjects prefer to work on the iCBT program with their home care workers, their workers will also been consented and receive a training. After their workers finish the required training, subjects will then start treatment. Research team will supply a tablet and prepaid data packages to subjects if they don't have access to a working device or internet package. Subjects are told that they have 3 months to use the online program. Subjects will receive a comprehensive post-test assessment once they complete the entire program or at the end of the 3-month period, whichever occurs first. Subjects will also be asked to participate in a short individual interview during post-test. All assessments with subjects will take place at their home. The structured part of the comprehensive baseline and post-test includes three parts: an online self-administered survey, a clinical interview, and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) test for cognitive impairment using the MoCA app. In addition to these scheduled assessments, Beating the Blues, the iCBT program used in the study, has built-in assessments (PHQ-9 and GAD-7) at the start of session 1 and the end of session 3, 5, 7, \& 8.
Survey data will be recorded and managed using Qualtrics.
Post-treatment analysis will involve an intention-to-treat design where missing data are addressed by carrying forward data previously collected. Primary outcomes include Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) for depressive symptoms, number of sessions completed, and program satisfaction/acceptability. Difference in PHQ-9 between session 1 and post-test will be calculated and tested. Session 1 PHQ-9 score will be used to assure consistency in time lapsed up until post-test. Secondary outcomes include Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) for anxiety and Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) for cognitive impairment. Difference in GAD-7 between session 1 and post-test will be calculated and tested. Difference in MoCA score between baseline and post-test will be tested. Paired-sample t-test will be used to detect statistically significant difference. Effect sizes (Cohen's d) and 95% confidence intervals will be calculated. Statistical analyses will be conducted using Stata 15.1 SE version.
This study is supported by an Investigator-Initiated Grant from the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation and a grant from the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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iCBT treatment group
Subjects were given license to use Beating the Blues, a commercially available iCBT program. Subjects were given 3 months to use the program.
Beating the Blues
Automated, cognitive behavioral therapy delivered via a website. There are 8 sessions, each taking one to 1.5 hours to complete. Sessions are prerecorded and sequenced. Sessions are based on the principles of cognitive behavioral therapy and include techniques such as cognitive restructuring and behavioral activation. The entire program takes about 8 to 12 weeks to complete.
Interventions
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Beating the Blues
Automated, cognitive behavioral therapy delivered via a website. There are 8 sessions, each taking one to 1.5 hours to complete. Sessions are prerecorded and sequenced. Sessions are based on the principles of cognitive behavioral therapy and include techniques such as cognitive restructuring and behavioral activation. The entire program takes about 8 to 12 weeks to complete.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* have received home care for ≥ 1 month and anticipate continued care for ≥ 3 months
* have at least mild depressive symptoms (PHQ-9≥5)
* speak English.
Exclusion Criteria
* Have a psychotic disorder (BPRS)
* Have active suicidal ideation based on endorsement of PHQ-9 item 9 (other than not at all)
* Severe cognitive impairment, assessed as having ≥ 3 errors on the 6-item Mini mental state exam
* Have a planned hospital admission in the next 3 months of enrollment
60 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Michigan
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Xiaoling Xiang
Assistant Professor
Principal Investigators
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Xiaoling Xiang, PhD, MSW
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Michigan School of Social Work
Locations
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University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Countries
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References
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Xiang X, Kayser J, Sun Y, Himle J. Internet-Based Psychotherapy Intervention for Depression Among Older Adults Receiving Home Care: Qualitative Study of Participants' Experiences. JMIR Aging. 2021 Nov 22;4(4):e27630. doi: 10.2196/27630.
Other Identifiers
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2748II
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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