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Triple Aim Psychotherapy: Aimed at Improving Patient Experience, Population Health, and Cost

Triple Aim Psychotherapy: an RCT Comparing Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) to Adaptive Psychological Training (APT) - a Treatment Aimed at Improving Patient Experience, Population Health, and Cost-effectiveness

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03659591
Acronym
TAP
Enrollment
80
Registered
2018-09-06
Start date
2018-09-30
Completion date
2019-11-30
Last updated
2018-09-06

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Anxiety Symptoms, Depressive Symptoms

Keywords

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Community Mental Health, Adaptive Psychological Training, Quality of Life, Wellbeing, Treatment

Brief summary

Community mental health programs in publically-funded jurisdictions such as Canada often have limited budgets in order to provide services, which can result in inadequate access to effective treatment for patients. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) is a gold-standard psychotherapy for depression and anxiety. In order to improve access to treatment, community mental healthcare settings often provide CBT in a group format for patients experiencing mild-to-moderate symptoms. However, typical protocols for delivering group CBT in a community setting nonetheless require a considerable investment of limited clinician time. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) developed the Triple Aim, which is a framework describing an approach to optimizing health system performance by simultaneously pursuing three dimensions, namely improving the patient experience of care; improving the health of populations; and reducing the associated per capita costs of care. Adaptive Psychological Training (APT) is a group-based psychotherapy designed with all of the dimensions of the Triple Aim in mind simultaneously. In its development, APT drew heavily upon mindfulness-based approaches. To-date, APT has already demonstrated positive outcomes in pilot research and in community clinical settings. The purpose of the current study is to determine whether for a given population of patients experiencing mild-to-moderate symptoms of depression and/or anxiety, APT can facilitate meaningful change for more patients per time spent by clinicians than can CBT.

Detailed description

Depression and anxiety are highly prevalent in the general population. Community mental health programs in publically-funded jurisdictions such as Canada often have relatively limited, fixed budgets in order to provide services, which can result in inadequate access to effective treatment for patients. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) is a gold-standard psychotherapeutic treatment for depression and anxiety. In order to improve access to treatment, community mental healthcare settings often provide CBT in a group format for patients experiencing mild-to-moderate symptoms. However, typical protocols for delivering group CBT in a community setting nonetheless require a considerable investment of limited clinician time. The question arises as to whether this is the most efficient and effective use of clinician time; in other words, per hour spent of clinician time, does this approach maximize the number of patients experiencing adequate and meaningful clinical improvement? The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) developed the Triple Aim, which is a framework describing an approach to optimizing health system performance by simultaneously pursuing three dimensions, namely improving the patient experience of care; improving the health of populations; and reducing the associated per capita costs of care. Studies of psychotherapy rarely pursue all three of these dimensions simultaneously. Efforts to achieve the best clinical outcome for an individual often lead to restrictive inclusionary/exclusionary criteria that sacrifice reaching the wider population; conversely, efforts to improve population health often prioritize composite overall clinical improvement across an entire group, even though the change experienced by many of the individuals in the population might not be clinically meaningful; focusing primarily on cost-effectiveness often sacrifices the individual's experience and/or the population's needs. Adaptive Psychological Training (APT) is a group-based psychotherapy designed with all of the dimensions of the Triple Aim in mind simultaneously. In its development, APT drew heavily upon Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy, an evidence-based psychotherapy that itself draws upon both evidence-based eastern psychotherapeutic practices and CBT, but APT also drew upon other evidence-based and evidence-supported psychotherapies including interpersonal and relational approaches, as well as meaning-focused psychoanalytic models. It also drew from psychology and neuroscience more broadly, as well as from learning theory and from practical clinical and operational experience. Inclusion/exclusion criteria, group size, number of sessions, in-session practice and learning, and between-session practice and learning were all adapted from the perspective of trying to achieve high quality outcomes for a broader population within more contained costs, and thereby increase access to quality care. To-date, APT has already demonstrated positive outcomes in pilot research and in community clinical settings. The purpose of this specific study is to determine whether for a given population of patients experiencing mild-to-moderate symptoms of depression and/or anxiety, APT can facilitate meaningful change for more patients per time spent by clinicians than can CBT (the gold standard). The significance of this study includes its potential contribution to determining how best to deploy the limited resource of clinician time in a community setting in order to best help the most people.

Interventions

CBT will be delivered in group format, consisting of 10 weekly two-hour sessions, with 10 participants per group

BEHAVIORALAdaptive Psychological Training

APT will be delivered in group format, consisting of 5 weekly two-hour sessions, with 20 participants per group

Sponsors

Joseph Brant Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Treatment-seeking adults, interested and willing to participate in group psychotherapy * Mild-to-moderate depressive (score of ≥10 and \<20 on PHQ9) and/or anxious (score of ≥8 and \<15 on GAD7) symptoms * Ability to communicate, in written and spoken English

Exclusion criteria

* Severe depressive/anxious symptoms * Patients where the primary clinical focus is active suicidality or harm-to-others, psychosis, mania, substance use, posttraumatic stress, or personality pathology such that it would interfere with group function * Recent course(s) of the study psychotherapies

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Triple Aim MeasureAt 10 weeks; in a secondary fashion, this outcome will also be examined every two weeks across 6 monthsNumerator: The number of patients achieving reliable recovery; denominator: clinician time spent in hours ('reliable recovery' is defined as scores below 'caseness' for both depression \[\<10 on Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)\] and anxiety \[\<8 on Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7)\], with any change from above caseness to below caseness meeting the threshold of the Reliable Change Index)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Change from baseline - mental wellbeingPre- (week 0) and repeated monthly across 6 monthsScale used to measure mental wellbeing is the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS); score ranges from 14-70, where higher values indicate greater mental wellbeing (better outcome)
Change from baseline - self-compassionPre- (week 0) and repeated monthly across 6 monthsScale used to measure self-compassion is the Self-Compassion Scale - Short Form (SCS-SF); score ranges from 12-60, where higher values indicate greater self-compassion (better outcome)
Triple Aim Measure - recovery onlyAt 10 weeks; in a secondary fashion, this outcome will also be examined every two weeks across 6 monthsTriple Aim Composite Score (as above), but without the Reliable Change Index requirement
Change from baseline - functionPre- (week 0) and repeated monthly across 6 monthsScale used to measure function is the World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0 - 12 item version (WHODAS 2.0 12-item); score ranges from 0-48, where higher values indicate lower functioning (worse outcome)
Change from baseline - depressive symptomsPre- (week 0) and repeated every two weeks across 6 monthsScale used to measure depressive symptoms is the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9); score ranges from 0-27, where higher values indicate more depressive symptoms (worse outcome)
Change from baseline - anxiety symptomsPre- (week 0) and repeated every two weeks across 6 monthsScale used to measure anxiety symptoms is the Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item (GAD-7) Scale; score ranges from 0-21, where higher values indicate more anxiety symptoms (worse outcome)
Triple Aim Measure - improvement onlyAt 10 weeks; in a secondary fashion, this outcome will also be examined every two weeks across 6 monthsTriple Aim Composite Score (as above), but without the remission requirement

Countries

Canada

Contacts

Primary ContactSteven Selchen, MD MSt FRCPC
dr.steven.selchen@josephbranthospital.ca(905) 681-4812
Backup ContactBenjamin D Diplock, BScH
ben.diplock@sunnybrook.ca

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026