Depressive symptoms and disorders are among the most common adult health conditions with a lifetime prevalence of 15-20% and are a leading cause of disability /morbidity worldwide. Although evidence-based approaches such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), antidepressant medications, and depression collaborative care and quality improvement (QI) programs integrating depression care into primary health care can improve depression outcomes and disparities, racial / ethnic disparities continue to persist. Concurrently, according to a 2011 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report, little information exists on how to address the high rates of depression among sexual and gender minorities. Our study randomizes depressed, LGBTQ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered, queer), racial / ethnic minority adults to an evidence-based agency-level, depression quality improvement (QI) training \[Resources for Services (RS)\] and technical support alone or to a resiliency class (RC+), a 7-session resiliency, cognitive behavioral therapy class to enhance mood + automated mobile text reminders about basic reminders and care follow-up impact on improving adult patients' depressive symptoms. Depression QI (RS) training will be offered to three clusters of four to five LGBTQ-focused programs: two clusters in LA (Hollywood and South LA) and one cluster in NO. Clusters are comprised of one primary care, one mental health, and two to three community agencies (e.g., faith-based, social services/support, advocacy). All programs will receive depression QI training. Enrolled adult depressed patients (n=320) will be randomized individually to RC+ or RS (depression QI) alone to assess effects on primary outcomes: depressive symptoms \[8-item patient health questionnaire (PHQ-8) score and secondary outcomes: mental health quality of life \[12-item mental composite score (MCS-12) ≤ 40\], Resilience (Brief Resilience Scale), mental wellness, and physical health quality of life \[12-item physical composite (PCS-12)score\] at 6- and 12-month follow-up.
Depressive symptoms and disorders are among the most common adult health conditions and are a leading cause of disability /morbidity worldwide. Although evidence-based approaches such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), antidepressant medications, and depression collaborative care and quality improvement (QI) programs integrating depression care into primary health care can improve depression outcomes and disparities, racial / ethnic disparities continue to persist. Concurrently, according to a 2011 Institute of Medicine (IOM) report notes little information exists on how to address the high rates of depression among sexual and gender minorities, largely composed of lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGBTQ) individuals. Limited comparative effectiveness data exists to know what treatments and services options improve health disparities due to patient characteristics such as race / ethnicity, and sexual orientation. "Resilience Against Depression Disparities (RADD)" randomizes enrolled depressed, LGBTQ, racial / ethnic minority adults (n=320) to an agency-level, evidence-based depression quality improvement (QI) intervention \[Resources for Services (RS)\] training and technical support and then randomizes individuals to Resources for Services alone or to Resiliency Class+, a 7-session resiliency, depression cognitive behavioral therapy class + automated mobile text reminders about basic reminders and care follow-up impact on improving adult patients' depressive symptoms over 6- and 12-months. RS training will be offered to three clusters of four to five LGBTQ-focused programs: two clusters in LA (Hollywood and South LA) and one cluster in NO. Clusters are comprised of one primary care, one mental health, and two to three community agencies (e.g., faith-based, social services/support, advocacy). All programs will receive RS (depression QI training). All enrolled adult depressed patients will be within programs participating in RS (depression QI) trainings. Half of enrolled participants will be randomized to the Resilience Class +.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
265
See Arm Description
See Resource for Services (RS) Description
R.O.A.D.S. Clinic
Compton, California, United States
The ADAM Project - YMSM Program
Long Beach, California, United States
The LGBTQ Center - Long Beach
Long Beach, California, United States
AMAAD
Los Angeles, California, United States
AIDS Health Foundation Healthcare Center - Downtown Los Angeles
Los Angeles, California, United States
AIDS Health Foundation Healthcare Center - Hollywood
Los Angeles, California, United States
AIDS Health Foundation Public Health Division
Los Angeles, California, United States
Metropolitan Community Church
Los Angeles, California, United States
OASIS Clinic
Los Angeles, California, United States
Southern Transmasculine Alliance
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
...and 12 more locations
Depressive symptom count as measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire 8
The 8-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8) is a standard measure of depressive symptoms.
Time frame: Change from baseline at 6- and 12-month follow-up
Poor Mental Health-Related Quality of Life
12-item mental composite score (MCS-12) ≤ 40
Time frame: 6- and 12-month follow-up
Resilience
Brief Resilience Scale
Time frame: 6- and 12-month follow-up
Physical health-related quality of life
12-item physical composite score (PCS-12)
Time frame: 6- and 12-month follow-up
Mental Wellness
3 items in last 4 weeks: some feeling of being calm or peaceful, having energy or being happy (from 36-item Short Form Health Survey)
Time frame: 6- and 12-month follow-up
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