Abstract

BackgroundSchizophrenia leads to profound disability in everyday functioning (e.g., difficulty finding and maintaining employment, housing, and personal relationships). Medications can effectively reduce positive symptoms (e.g., hallucinations and delusions), but they do not meaningfully improve daily life functioning. Psychosocial evidence-based practices (EBPs) improve functioning, but these EBPs are not available to most people with schizophrenia. The field must close the research and service delivery gap by adapting EBPs for schizophrenia to facilitate widespread implementation in community settings. Our hybrid effectiveness and implementation study represents an initiative to bridge this divide. In this study we will test whether an existing EBP (i.e., Cognitive Behavioral Social Skills Training (CBSST)) modified to work in practice settings (i.e., Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) teams) commonly available to persons with schizophrenia results in better consumer outcomes. We will also identify key factors relevant to developing future CBSST implementation strategies.Methods/DesignFor the effectiveness study component, persons with schizophrenia will be recruited from existing publicly funded ACT teams operating in community settings. Participants will be randomized to one of the 2 treatments (ACT alone or ACT + Adapted CBSST) and followed longitudinally for 18 months with assessments every 18 weeks after baseline (5 in total). The primary outcome domain is psychosocial functioning (e.g., everyday living skills and activities related to employment, education, and housing) as measured by self-report, testing, and observation. Additional outcome domains of interest include mediators of change in functioning, symptoms, and quality of services. Primary analyses will be conducted using linear mixed-effects models for continuous data. The implementation study component consists of a structured, mixed qualitative-quantitative methodology (i.e., Concept Mapping) to characterize and assess the implementation experience from multiple stakeholder perspectives in order to inform future implementation initiatives.DiscussionAdapting CBSST to fit into the ACT service delivery context found throughout the United States creates an opportunity to substantially increase the number of persons with schizophrenia who could have access to and benefit from EBPs. As part of the implementation learning process training materials and treatment workbooks have been revised to promote easier use of CBSST in the context of brief community-based ACT visits.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov NCT02254733. Date of registration: 25 April 2014.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia leads to profound disability in everyday functioning

  • Adapting cognitive behavioral social skills training (CBSST) to fit into the Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) service delivery context found throughout the United States creates an opportunity to substantially increase the number of persons with schizophrenia who could have access to and benefit from evidence-based practices (EBPs)

  • This hybrid effectiveness and implementation [2] study protocol represents an initiative to bridge this divide by testing whether an existing EBP, called cognitive behavioral social skills training (CBSST), which has been modified to work in the context of Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) teams, commonly available to persons with schizophrenia in public sector community practice settings, results in better consumer outcomes

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Summary

Discussion

The bundling of CBT and SST into the CBSST intervention is an innovative and comprehensive approach to improving functioning in schizophrenia. A demonstration of the effectiveness of ACT + CBSST and the identification of important implementation barriers and facilitators through this hybrid research study may result in greater availability of these interventions in this population To our knowledge, this is the first effectiveness study of CBT and SST for schizophrenia implemented on ACT teams by frontline providers in the United States. As a hybrid effectiveness and implementation study, we will identify barriers and facilitators to implementation of the CBSST program, enabling us to develop guidelines that will maximize successful implementation of the program in the future Given this attention to implementation factors, we have been meeting with agency frontline staff and their supervisors as part of their ongoing training and to help troubleshoot challenges related to providing ACT + CBSST.

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