Serious mental illness (SMI), encompassing schizophrenia-spectrum and major mood disorders, has been estimated to affect approximately 5.4% of the U.S. adult population each year. Research shows low rates of evidence-based treatment being provided to patients with SMI. This is unfortunate, because evidence-based psychological therapies have been shown to be effective for improving outcomes in SMI. One such efficacious psychological intervention is mindfulness-based therapy (MBT), which integrates mindfulness practice with cognitive-behavioral strategies to improve illness management. Previous trials conducted in the United Kingdom have shown that MBT improves symptoms and functioning in community-based outpatients with SMI, including in routine practice settings. In the U.S., most patients with SMI receive treatment at local community mental health centers (CMHCs). However, patients in CMHCs often cannot access evidence-based therapies like MBT due to the lack of trained staff able to provide these interventions. Further, previous studies of MBT have been conducted exclusively outside the U.S. It is essential to confirm that MBT is effective when delivered for patients with SMI in the U.S., and how it can be sustainably implemented in CMHCs where this clinical population is commonly treated. Thus, the investigators propose to test the effectiveness of MBT for SMI and study its implementation in a typical CMHC setting. The investigators will randomize 160 patients with SMI (psychotic-spectrum and major mood disorders) to receive treatment as usual (TAU) vs TAU plus MBT delivered by frontline clinicians in a large, diverse CMHC. The investigators will conduct blinded assessments at baseline and at 6- (mid), 12- (post), and 24-weeks (follow-up). Consistent with an experimental therapeutics approach, the investigators will examine potential mechanisms of action (e.g., mindfulness skills), as well as collect implementation-focused quantitative and qualitative data from our community partners (patients, administrators, clinicians). If found to be effective and aided by a certified training program and the implementation data collected, MBT could be adopted as a future evidence-based practice and integrated into the routine community care of patients with SMI, thereby reducing health disparities.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
160
Mindfulness-based therapy provided in a group format.
Treatment as usually provided.
Butler Hospital
Providence, Rhode Island, United States
Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS)
The interviewer-rated Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale is a measure of psychiatric symptom severity. The total score (sum of items) will be used to assess overall severity with scores ranging from 18 to 126 and higher scores indicating greater severity.
Time frame: 24 weeks
WHO Quality of Life-BREF (WHOQOL-BREF)
The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item self-report measure of quality of life. Items are rated on a scale from 1 to 5 with total scores ranging from 26 to 130, with higher scores indicating higher quality of life.
Time frame: 24 weeks
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