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UnknownNCT04035057

Examining Behavioral Strategies for Enhancing Therapists' Delivery of Exposure Therapy

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
32 (estimated)
Sponsor
Bradley Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this study is to test a targeted training for overcoming known barriers to the uptake and quality delivery of exposure therapy among community mental health providers. The first phase (Year 1) of the study is a case-series analysis of six therapists with the goal of determining whether the targeted training strategies (i.e., exposure to exposure) are capable of engaging therapists' reservations about exposure. Information from the first phase will be used to optimize the behavioral training strategies to be tested in the second phase. The second phase (Years 2 \& 3) will be a randomized trial of training conditions comparing Behaviorally Enhanced Training Strategies to a Standard Didactic Training. After an initial workshop training, therapists in the second phase will receive ongoing consultation while they deliver exposure therapy with their anxious patients. Sessions will be video-recorded and therapist behaviors will be coded to assess for differences in the manner in which exposure is delivered between training conditions.

Detailed description

Following decades of psychosocial treatment research the field has established numerous evidence-based practices (EBPs) for mental disorders, but has struggled to widely disseminate these practices in community settings. Exposure therapy for anxiety disorders represents one of the most glaring examples of this research to practice gap. A well-known barrier to the dissemination and quality delivery of exposure therapy is therapists' negative beliefs about its potential danger or intolerability for patients. These beliefs are common even among therapists who report receiving specialized training; thus, research is needed to develop targeted training strategies for reducing negative beliefs and improving delivery quality. Preliminary research suggests specific behavioral strategies (i.e., self-exposure) may reduce negative beliefs above and beyond standard didactic trainings (Farrell, Kemp et al., 2016). Building upon these findings, the investigators propose a novel experimental therapeutics approach to developing and testing a targeted behavioral training for augmenting negative beliefs in a sample of community mental health professionals. The first phase of the study is a case-series analysis for establishing target engagement (i.e., belief reduction) and determining adequate dosing of the behavioral strategies. Phase two is a randomized trial of the behaviorally-enhanced training strategies (BeTS) against a standard didactic protocol. Therapist will complete a day-long workshop followed by weekly consultation while delivering exposure for children with anxiety disorders. In-session delivery behavior will be recorded and examined using a validated micro-analytic coding system. It is hypothesized that therapists in the BeTS condition will evidence significantly lower negative beliefs about exposure relative to the didactic condition, at 1) post-workshop, and 2) end of study. IT is also hypothesized that the degree of negative belief reduction following the initial workshop training will be associated with 1) higher rates of optimal in-session delivery behaviors, and 2) lower rates of suboptimal delivery behaviors as measured by both self-report and observational coding data. This study will establish an innovative model for developing a targeted training intervention capable of increasing the dissemination and quality of exposure therapy and other EBPs.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERBehaviorally Enhanced TrainingTherapists in the Behaviorally Enhanced Training will receive the same didactic instruction as those in the Standard Didactic Training arm during the first full day of training. In the second half-day training, those in the Behaviorally Enhanced Training arm will focus on behavioral strategies (i.e., exposure to exposure) that provide direct experience with the process of treatment delivery.
OTHERStandard Didactic TrainingTherapists in the Standard Didactic Training arm will complete training as usual, consisting of PowerPoint and video training tasks instructing the delivery of exposure therapy for anxious youth.

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-01
Primary completion
2021-12-31
Completion
2021-12-31
First posted
2019-07-29
Last updated
2019-07-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04035057. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Examining Behavioral Strategies for Enhancing Therapists' Delivery of Exposure Therapy (NCT04035057) · Clinical Trials Directory