The Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C) for serious mental illness in community mental health part 3: Study protocol to evaluate sustainment in a hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial.

Laurel D Sarfan, Emma R Agnew, Marlen Diaz, Ashby Cogan, Julia M Spencer, Rafael Esteva Hache, Shannon Wiltsey Stirman, Cara C Lewis, Amy M Kilbourne, Allison Harvey
Author Information
  1. Laurel D Sarfan: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  2. Emma R Agnew: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  3. Marlen Diaz: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  4. Ashby Cogan: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  5. Julia M Spencer: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  6. Rafael Esteva Hache: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley.
  7. Shannon Wiltsey Stirman: VA National Center for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Dissemination and Training Division.
  8. Cara C Lewis: Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute.
  9. Amy M Kilbourne: VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
  10. Allison Harvey: UC Berkeley: University of California Berkeley. ORCID

Abstract

treatments (EBPTs) has advanced rapidly, research on the sustainment of implemented EBPTs remains limited. This is concerning, given that EBPT activities and benefits regularly decline post-implementation. To advance research on sustainment, the present protocol focuses on the third and final phase - the Sustainment Phase - of a hybrid type 2 cluster-randomized controlled trial investigating the implementation and sustainment of the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C) for patients with serious mental illness and sleep and circadian problems in community mental health centers (CMHCs). Prior to the first two phases of the trial - the Implementation Phase and Train-the-Trainer Phase - TranS-C was adapted to fit the CMHC context. Then, 10 CMHCs were cluster-randomized to implement Standard or Adapted TranS-C via facilitation and train-the-trainer. The primary goal of the Sustainment Phase is to investigate whether adapting TranS-C to fit the CMHC context predicts improved sustainment outcomes.
Methods: Data collection for the Sustainment Phase will commence at least three months after implementation efforts in partnering CMHCs have ended and may continue for up to one year. CMHC providers will be recruited to complete surveys ( = 154) and a semi-structured interview ( = 40) on sustainment outcomes and mechanisms. Aim 1 is to report the sustainment outcomes of TranS-C. Aim 2 is to evaluate whether manipulating EBPT fit to context (i.e., Standard versus Adapted TranS-C) predicts sustainment outcomes. Aim 3 is to test whether provider perceptions of fit mediate the relation between treatment condition (i.e., Standard versus Adapted TranS-C) and sustainment outcomes. Mixed methods will be used to analyze the data.
Discussion: The present study seeks to advance our understanding of sustainment predictors, mechanisms, and outcomes by investigating (a) whether the implementation strategy of adapting an EBPT (i.e., TranS-C) to the CMHC context predicts improved sustainment outcomes and (b) whether this relation is mediated by improved provider perceptions of treatment fit. Together, the findings may help inform more precise implementation efforts that contribute to lasting change.
Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT05956678. Registered on July 21, 2023. https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT05956678?term=NCT05956678&draw=2&rank=1.

Keywords

Associated Data

ClinicalTrials.gov | NCT05956678

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Grants

  1. F32 MH131284/NIMH NIH HHS
  2. R01 MH120147/NIMH NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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