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Clinical Trial: Testing the Right Question Project Health Education Strategy in a Mental Health Setting
This study is currently recruiting patients.
Verified by Cambridge Health Alliance August 2005
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Purpose
| Condition | Intervention |
|---|---|
| Depression Anxiety Other Psychiatric Disorder | Behavior: patient health education module |
MedlinePlus related topics: Depression
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Educational/Counseling/Training, Non-Randomized, Single Blind, Uncontrolled, Single Group Assignment
Expected Total Enrollment: 200
Study start: August 2004; Expected completion: September 2007
Last follow-up: December 2005; Data entry closure: March 2006
Recent research has demonstrated positive outcomes for patients who take an active role in their mental health care (Linhorst & Eckert, 2003). Patients who participate in the decision-making process are more satisfied with services, have a greater sense of self-efficacy and confidence, an increased ability to cope with daily life, and are more likely to achieve their treatment goals (Linhorst & Eckert, 2003). As defined by Chamberlin and Schene (1997), empowerment in mental health care requires having access to information and resources, having a range of options from which to make choices, learning to think critically, and having the power to make decisions. Cooper-Patrick et al. (1999) indicate that minority patients are less likely to have a collaborative relationship with providers than are otherwise similar white patients. Thus, there is a need for minority patients to learn to take a more active role in their care. One way to address the need for increased empowerment and activation among minority mental health patients is to provide them with training to enhance their communication and decision-making skills. The Right Question Project (RQP) is a consumer educational technique designed for this purpose and developed for use in multiple settings. The proposed study will examine the effectiveness of RQP with a Latino population.
The Right Question Project (RQP) is a non-profit organization that works primarily with low- and moderate-income communities with a history of disengagement from education, health care, and other social services. The RQP approach differs from traditional models of client empowerment in that instead of supplying clients with solutions to problems, the RQP gives them a means to develop their own solutions. RQP teaches clients to identify important issues, formulate questions, and devise plans to communicate and act in effective ways that address factors impacting their health. The RQP methodology involves: 1) establishing a set of beliefs, principles, and values about client involvement; 2) teaching a skill-building technique that helps clients to think critically and ask the “right” questions, leading to the answers they need; and 3) giving clients a framework to create action plans and use their question-formulation skills. The RQP methodology is designed to build a permanent skill that clients can apply in health care, as well as in other contexts that involve self-advocacy (e.g., getting better child care). Thus far, implementation of the Right Question Project has shown that clients of any education or literacy level can easily participate and benefit from the methodology’s three-step approach. RQP has been particularly successful in educational settings (Cohen, 1995).
The focus of the RQP health education module is to help patients learn how to formulate and ask questions of their health care providers, in order to improve the quality of their care. The Right Question Project, Inc. developed this protocol and trained staff at the Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) to conduct health education modules with psychiatry outpatients. The pilot study uses a pre-post test design with two groups of 100 patients each from two clinics that serve primarily Latino patients. The group at the CHA clinic will serve as the “treatment” group. This group will receive the training modules and will be interviewed about their experience in care. The group at the clinic at Massachusetts General Hospital will serve as the “control” group. This group will be interviewed without first receiving the training. Outcomes for the groups will be compared to look for an effect. If the RQP training appears to have a positive affect on patients at CHA, then MGH patients will be offered the RQP training. By testing the effectiveness of this educational module, we hope to establish its usefulness as a means for the Cambridge Health Alliance to become even more patient-centered and to assist in the integration and institutionalization of patient empowerment/activation.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Must be a mental health outpatient at selected clinics
Exclusion Criteria:
- Unable to verbalize or take verbal direction
- Unable to sit still in one place to participate in education modules
- Potential violent towards others
Location and Contact Information
Massachusetts
Windsor Street Health Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02139, United States; Recruiting
Margarita Alegria, PhD, Principal Investigator
MGH Chelsea Healthcare Center, Chelsea, Massachusetts, 02150, United States; Recruiting
Aida L Jimenez, PhD, Principal Investigator
Margarita Alegria, PhD, Principal Investigator, Cambridge Health Alliance
More Information
Last Updated: August 24, 2005
Record first received: August 24, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00134615
Health Authority: United States: Institutional Review Board
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-08-30

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