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Active Not RecruitingNCT06874439

An Evaluation of the WHO QUAlityRights Program

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
1,800 (estimated)
Sponsor
GCS-CCOMS · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The World Health Organization's (WHO) QualityRights (QR) program offers assessments and recommendations to help mental health facilities, on a voluntary basis, improve their care practices towards better respect of the rights of service users. The aim of this study is to evaluate the QR program in a French national context. The main questions it aims to answer are: * Does the QR program improve perceived satisfaction with care among mental health service users? * What are the implementation procedures of the program? * What is its budgetary impact? Researchers will compare the QR program intervention with usual practices.

Detailed description

In France, despite the existence of recommendations and a restrictive legal framework, the use of restraint practices in psychiatry remains widespread, and the duration and conditions of hospitalization do not always guarantee respect for users' rights. The World Health Organization's (WHO) QualityRights (QR) program offers assessments, called "observations", and recommendations to help mental health facilities, on a voluntary basis, improve their care practices towards better respect of the rights of service users. However, the program has never been evaluated in a French national context. The WHO QR program, published in 2012 and regularly updated since, aims to improve the quality of care in mental health and related services and promote the rights of people with psychosocial, intellectual and cognitive disabilities. The reference base for the tools that make up the program is the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), ratified by France in 2010. This international convention defines ambitious objectives in terms of respect for rights, some of which are particularly relevant to mental health services. However, the convention does not offer any concrete indications as to how these major international standards are to be applied. The QR program provides a concrete response to this need, offering observation and training tools not only for mental health services, but more broadly for all those concerned by mental health issues. In particular, the observation methodology is designed to respond to a request for support in changing practices that comes directly from a facility. The WHO Collaborating Centre in Lille is mandated by the WHO to roll out this program in France and other French-speaking countries. It is expected that the QualityRights approach will act as a lever for change in the organization of services, providing a multidisciplinary perspective on users' rights and recovery-oriented practices. The primary research objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of the QR program on the perceived satisfaction with care of mental health service users. The secondary research objectives concern: A. Evaluating the effectiveness of the QR program on: 1. Improving work-related quality of life among mental health professionals 2. Decreasing the number of involuntary admissions 3. Reducing the length of full-time hospital stays 4. Reducing the number of acts of seclusion and restraint 5. The distribution of clinical activity in favour of ambulatory activity B. Evaluating the efficiency and the budgetary impact of the QR program. C. Conducting an implementation study to understand the appropriation of the recommendations by professionals and management following the introduction of the QR program by exploring the representations linked to the QR program and respect for users' rights among mental health professionals. This research involves an effectiveness study, supplemented by an implementation study based on a qualitative methodology, and an economic evaluation. The effectiveness study is a cluster randomized trial designed to compare the effectiveness of the QR program intervention versus usual practices on user satisfaction. The cluster is defined at the level of the psychiatric sector (the public psychiatric care entity organizing the mental health care of a population within a pre-specified geographical and demographic area in France, to meet local needs). 10 psychiatric sectors are participating, randomized into two groups: the intervention group receiving the QR program and the control group maintaining their usual practices. Data will be collected in both groups at baseline, and during follow-up at 1 and 2 years. The implementation study and the economic evaluation will be carried out in the intervention group after the effectiveness study.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERWHO QualityRights programThe WHO's QualityRights program involves an assessment, called observation, of mental health care services by an ephemeral multidisciplinary team, which provides feedback and recommendations for improving care practices. The observation team, trained in the QualityRights (QR) methodology, includes mental health professionals, researchers, legal experts, and management staff from mental health organizations. Each team always incorporates at least one expert by experience and one informal caregiver or family member. Participation in the program is voluntary and initiated at the request of healthcare facilities. The observation is structured into three stages: 1. Site preparation 2. On-site observation 3. Restitution of observation report and follow-up

Timeline

Start date
2024-06-17
Primary completion
2027-06-01
Completion
2027-10-01
First posted
2025-03-13
Last updated
2025-12-04

Locations

10 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06874439. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.