Psychotropic medications are a cornerstone of treatment for individuals with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, however rates of full or partial non-adherence can exceed 60%. Inadequate adherence is associated with poor outcomes such as relapse, homelessness, hospitalization, and increased health care costs. Studies have shown a direct correlation between non-adherence and rates of relapse in schizophrenia; on average, non-adherent patients have a risk of relapse that is 3.7 times greater than their adherent counterparts. A major obstacle to good outcomes in the maintenance treatment of patients with severe mental illness is difficulty with medication routines on an on-going basis. For this reason, long-acting injectable antipsychotic medication is a particularly attractive treatment option for populations with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, although it is unlikely that medication treatment alone is likely to modify long-term attitudes and behaviors. This prospective study is a pilot analysis of a combined approach which merges a psychosocial intervention to optimize treatment attitudes towards psychotropic medication (CAE) and long-acting injectable antipsychotic medication (L) in recently homeless individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder who are known to have on-going difficulties with treatment non-adherence. It is expected that this combined approach (CAE-L) will improve illness outcomes among the most vulnerable of populations with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Drug is in in injectable form and will be administered approximately every four weeks through Week 25 of the study. A participant may continue on the drug after Week 25 at the discretion of his or her treating psychiatrist. Dosage is per package insert or at the discretion of the psychiatrist.
Drug will be administered in oral form to participants not already taking oral haloperidol and then transitioned to the injectable version. Dosage and frequency is at the discretion of the psychiatrist.
CAE targets key areas relevant to non-adherent populations with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder: 1) inadequate or incorrect understanding of mental disorder; 2) lack of medication-taking routines; 3) poor communication with care providers; and 4) substance use which interferes with adherence and healthy behaviors that promote recovery. CAE is delivered based upon initial assessment of reasons for non-adherence and only those components of CAE that are determined to be indicated for that individual are delivered (psychoeducation, modified motivational interviewing, assistance with medication routines, coaching in communication with providers).
University Hosptials
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Change From Baseline in Days Homeless Out of the Previous 6 Months as Measured at 25 Weeks
Subjects will be asked how many days they have been homeless
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change From Baseline in Treatment Adherence Score as Measured at 25 Weeks
A total treatment adherence score will calculated as a proportion of medications taken as reported from the participant, and evidenced by pill counts and documented medication injections.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change From Baseline in Adherence Attitude Score as Measured by the Drug Attitude Inventory (DAI) at 25 Weeks
Ten item inventory taken by the participant with a Scale Range: 0-10. Higher scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change From Baseline in Treatment Adherence Behavior Score as Measured by the Morisky Medication Rating Scale at 25 Weeks
Four item inventory taken by participant with Scale Range: 0-4. Lower scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change From Baseline in Adherence Attitude Score as Measured by the Attitude Toward Medication Questionnaire (AMQ) at 25 Weeks
Nineteen item inventory taken by the participant with Scale Range:0-19. Lower scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Frequency of Health Resource Use Throughout Months 10, 11, and 12
The frequency of health resource use will be measured through interview of the participant.
Time frame: Month 1-3, Month 10-12
Change in Serious Mental Illness Severity Score as Measured by the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) at 25 Weeks
The BPRS, developed by Overall and Gorham (1962), is a widely used, relatively brief scale that measures major psychotic and non-psychotic symptoms in individuals with SMI. The 18-item BPRS is well-validated and is perhaps the most researched instrument in psychiatry. Reliability coefficients are reported to be in the range of 0.56-0.87. Scale Range: 18-126 Lower scores represent improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change in Global Psychopathology as Measured by the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) at 25 Weeks
Global psychopathology will be measured with the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) (Guy 1976) a widely used scale which evaluates illness severity on a 1 to 7 point continuum. Severity of illness ratings on the CGI have reported reliability scores ranging from 0.41-0.66 (Guy 1976) Lower scores indicate improved outcomes. Higher scores indicate worse outcomes. Illness scale: 1 - 7 (1 = Normal/not at all ill ; 7 = Among the most extremely ill patients) Global improvement scale: 1 - 7 (1 = Very much improved ; 7 = Very much worse)
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Change in Social and Occupational Functioning Scale (SOFAS) as Measured at 25 Weeks
Life and Work Functional status will be evaluated using the Social and Occupational Functioning Scale (SOFAS), which is derived from the GAF (Global Assessment of Functioning). The GAF is a 100-point single-item scale which measures global functioning of psychiatric patients and is widely utilized in clinical studies involving Seriously Mentally Ill patients (Jones 1995). The reliability of the GAF ranges from 0.62-0.82. Higher scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Treatment Satisfaction as Measured by the Participant Acceptability and Satisfaction Questionnaire at 25 Weeks
Satisfaction will be measured by a seven item inventory taken by the participant. Scale ranges from 1 (Strongly Agree) to 5 (Strongly Disagree). Lower scores indicate better outcomes, while higher scores indicate worse outcomes. The highest possible score is 35.
Time frame: 25 weeks
Change in Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Disorder Symptom Severity Scale as Measured by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) at 25 Weeks
The PANSS (Kay, Fiszbein, \& Opler 1987) was created to assess both the positive and negative symptoms of schizophrenia such as hallucinations and emotional withdrawal, respectively. The scale rates 30 symptoms on a scale from 1 (absent) to 7 (extreme) and has been shown to limit bias between the assessment of positive and negative symptoms, providing a broad but balanced spectrum of the illness. There are three subscales: positive symptoms, negative symptoms, general psychopathology. Potential responses to Items on all subscales range from 1 (absent) to 7 (extreme). Lower scores indicate lower symptoms and, therefore, better outcomes. Higher scores indicate more presence of symptoms and, therefore, worse outcomes. Subscales are combined to produce a total score, which is summed from all of the subscales. Lower total scores indicate lower symptoms and, therefore, better outcomes. Higher total scores indicate more presence of symptoms and, therefore, worse outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-25 weeks
Frequency of Health Resource Use in the Past 3 Months as Measured at 25 Weeks
The frequency of health resource use will be measured through interview of the participant.
Time frame: 25 weeks
Global Psychopathology as Measured by the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) at 12 Months
Global psychopathology will be measured with the Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) (Guy 1976) a widely used scale which evaluates illness severity on a 1 to 7 point continuum. Severity of illness ratings on the CGI have reported reliability scores ranging from 0.41-0.66 (Guy 1976) Lower scores indicate improved outcomes. Higher scores indicate worse outcomes. Illness scale: 1 - 7 (1 = Normal/not at all ill ; 7 = Among the most extremely ill patients) Global improvement scale: 1 - 7 (1 = Very much improved ; 7 = Very much worse)
Time frame: 12 months
Change in Social and Occupational Functioning Scale (SOFAS) as Measured at 12 Months
Life and Work Functional status will be evaluated using the Social and Occupational Functioning Scale (SOFAS), which is derived from the GAF. The GAF is a 100-point single-item scale which measures global functioning of psychiatric patients and is widely utilized in clinical studies involving Seriously Mentally Ill patients (Jones 1995). The reliability of the GAF ranges from 0.62-0.82. Higher scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: Baseline-12 months
Treatment Satisfaction as Measured by the Participant Acceptability and Satisfaction Questionnaire at 12 Months
Satisfaction will be measured by a seven item inventory taken by the participant. Scale ranges from 1 (Strongly Agree) to 5 (Strongly Disagree). Lower scores indicate better outcomes, while higher scores indicate worse outcomes. The highest possible score is 35.
Time frame: 12 months
Days Homeless Out of the Previous 6 Months as Measured at 12 Months
Subjects will be asked how many days they have been homeless
Time frame: 12 months
Treatment Adherence Score as Measured at 12 Months
A total treatment adherence score will calculated as a proportion of medications taken as reported from the participant, and evidenced by pill counts and documented medication injections.
Time frame: 12 months
Adherence Attitude Score as Measured by the Drug Attitude Inventory (DAI) at 12 Months
Ten item inventory taken by the participant with a Scale Range: 0-10. Higher scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: 12 months
Treatment Adherence Behavior Score as Measured by the Morisky Medication Rating Scale at 12 Months
Four item inventory taken by participant with Scale Range: 0-4. Lower scores indicate better outcomes.
Time frame: 12 months
Adherence Attitude Score as Measured by the Attitude Toward Medication Questionnaire (AMQ) at 12 Months
Nineteen item inventory taken by the participant with Scale Range:0-19. Lower scores indicate improved outcomes.
Time frame: 12 months
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