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The Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C) for serious mental illness in community mental health part 2: study protocol for a hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial using train-the-trainer

  • Catherine A. Callaway
  • , Laurel D. Sarfan
  • , Emma R. Agnew
  • , Lu Dong
  • , Julia M. Spencer
  • , Rafael Esteva Hache
  • , Marlen Diaz
  • , Shayna A. Howlett
  • , Krista R. Fisher
  • , Heather E.Hilmoe Yates
  • , Eric Stice
  • , Amy M. Kilbourne
  • , Daniel J. Buysse
  • , Allison G. Harvey

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Train-the-trainer (TTT) is a promising method for implementing evidence-based psychological treatments (EBPTs) in community mental health centers (CMHCs). In TTT, expert trainers train locally embedded individuals (i.e., Generation 1 providers) to deliver an EBPT, who then train others (i.e., Generation 2 providers). The present study will evaluate implementation and effectiveness outcomes of an EBPT for sleep and circadian dysfunction—the Transdiagnostic Intervention for Sleep and Circadian Dysfunction (TranS-C)—delivered to CMHC patients with serious mental illness by Generation 2 providers (i.e., trained and supervised within CMHCs via TTT). Specifically, we will investigate whether adapting TranS-C to fit CMHC contexts improves Generation 2 (a) patient outcomes and (b) providers’ perceptions of fit. Methods: TTT will be implemented in nine CMHCs in California, USA (N = 60 providers; N = 130 patients) via facilitation. CMHCs are cluster-randomized by county to Adapted TranS-C or Standard TranS-C. Within each CMHC, patients are randomized to immediate TranS-C or usual care followed by delayed treatment with TranS-C (UC-DT). Aim 1 will assess the effectiveness of TranS-C (combined Adapted and Standard), compared to UC-DT, on improvements in sleep and circadian problems, functional impairment, and psychiatric symptoms for Generation 2 patients. Aim 2 will evaluate whether Adapted TranS-C is superior to Standard TranS-C with respect to Generation 2 providers’ perceptions of fit. Aim 3 will evaluate whether Generation 2 providers’ perceived fit mediates the relation between TranS-C treatment condition and patient outcomes. Exploratory analyses will (1) evaluate whether the effectiveness of TranS-C for patient outcomes is moderated by generation, (2) compare Adapted and Standard TranS-C on patient perceptions of credibility/improvement and PhenX Toolkit outcomes (e.g., substance use, suicidality), and (3) evaluate other possible moderators. Discussion: This trial has potential to (a) inform the process of embedding local trainers and supervisors to expand delivery of a promising transdiagnostic treatment for sleep and circadian dysfunction, (b) add to the growing body of TTT literature by evaluating TTT outcomes with a novel treatment and population, and (c) advance our understanding of providers’ perceptions of EBPT “fit” across TTT generations. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT05805657 . Registered on April 10, 2023.

Original languageEnglish
Article number503
JournalTrials
Volume24
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

Keywords

  • Adaptation
  • Circadian
  • Community mental health
  • Implementation
  • Serious mental illness
  • Sleep
  • Sustainment
  • Train-the-trainer
  • Transdiagnostic

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