Depression is a highly prevalent disorder in Chile, generating important personal and social costs. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the internet-based program ASCENSO as an adjunct intervention for the treatment of depression. ASCENSO provides information to promote patients' self-care, it monitors reported depression symptoms providing automatized feedback and provides the possibility of booking a counseling session via chat or by phone. To evaluate the effectiveness of ASCENSO, an open, evaluator-blind, prospective, parallel-group (one intervention group and one active control group) randomized controlled trial will be implemented in one mental health center in Santiago of Chile. The sample will be composed of adults initiating treatment for depression, and who have internet access. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the two study arms. Randomization will be stratified by the number of patients´ previous episodes (dichotomized into none, 1 or more), following a permuted block randomization procedure. Patients in the experimental group (n=100) will receive the usual treatment plus access to the ASCENSO program. The control group (n=100) will only receive the usual treatment. At recruitment, months 6 and 9, patients' self-reported depression symptoms and quality of life will be assessed. Additionally, adherence to treatment in terms of patients' attendance to medical controls and psychotherapy sessions will be registered for both research groups.
The public health system has established policies and priorities to provide access to depression treatment and to improve the quality of those services. The acknowledgment of the complexity and chronicity of the disorder has motivated the design and implementation of comprehensive disease management strategies for depression. There are experiences that show that information technologies can help to optimize the management of depression. If ASCENSO is effective, it could be a useful resource to include to the mental health services for depression in Chile. The components of the ASCENSO program are: Emergency. Standard Information on what to do and who to contact in a crisis situation. Online or phone counseling. Patients can schedule a 30-minute session with a psychologist, which is conducted in a private text chatroom or over the phone. Monitoring. Patients receive a bi-weekly email with a link to the monitoring questionnaire and automatized tailored feedback message. If a participant reports severe impairment, the ASCENSO administrator receives an alert notification and then contacts the patient. Self-care information and blog. Web pages with basic information about depression and self-care recommendations.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
167
Internet-based program: an adjunct support and monitoring system for the treatment of depression.
Usual psychiatric treatment which may include drugs: antidepressant monotherapy or antidepressants in combination with anxiolytics, neuroleptics or mood stabilizers as needed, according to the psychiatric evaluation. Monthly controls during 5 months in average.
Usual treatment: brief psychotherapy. One session per week, a total of 9 sessions in average.
Psicomedica
Santiago, RM, Chile
Change in depressivity assessed with the Beck's Depression Inventory I (BDI-I)
Beck's Depression Inventory I (BDI-I) total score (score range 0 - 63)
Time frame: Baseline, months 6 and 9.
Change in quality of life change assessed with the EuroQol/EQ-5D
EuroQol/EQ-5D (EQ-index range 0 - 1)
Time frame: Baseline, months 6 and 9.
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