Bramoweth Adam D, Germain Anne, Youk Ada O, Rodriguez Keri L, Chinman Matthew J
Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion, VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Research Office Building (151R-U), University Drive C, Pittsburgh, PA, 15240, USA.
Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, Research Office Building (151R-U), University Drive C, Pittsburgh, PA, 15240, USA.
Trials. 2018 Jan 26;19(1):73. doi: 10.1186/s13063-017-2437-y.
Chronic insomnia is among the most reported complaints of Veterans and military personnel referred for mental health services. It is highly comorbid with medical and psychiatric disorders, and is associated with significantly increased healthcare utilization and costs. Evidence-based psychotherapy, namely Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBTI), is an effective treatment and recommended over prescription sleep medications. While CBTI is part of a nationwide rollout in the Veterans Health Administration to train hundreds of providers, access to treatment is still limited for many Veterans due to limited treatment availability, low patient and provider knowledge about treatment options, and Veteran barriers such as distance and travel, work schedules, and childcare. Uptake of a briefer, more primary-care-friendly treatment into routine clinical care in Veterans Affairs (VA) primary care settings, where insomnia is typically first recognized and diagnosed, may effectively and efficiently increase access to effective insomnia interventions and help decrease the risks and burdens related to chronic insomnia.
This hybrid type I trial is composed of two aims. The first preliminarily tests the clinical non-inferiority of Brief Behavioral Treatment for Insomnia (BBTI) versus the current "gold standard" treatment, CBTI. The second is a qualitative needs assessment, guided by the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR), to identify potential factors that may affect successful implementation and integration of behavioral treatments for insomnia in the primary care setting. To identify potential implementation factors, individual interviews are conducted with the Veterans who participate in the clinical trial, as well as VA primary care providers and nursing staff.
It is increasingly important to better understand barriers to, and facilitators of, implementing insomnia interventions in order to ensure that Veterans have the best access to care. Furthermore, it is important to evaluate the potential for new avenues of treatment delivery, like BBTI in the primary care setting, which can benefit Veterans who may not have adequate access to specialty mental health providers trained in CBTI.
ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT02724800 . Registered on 31 March 2016.
慢性失眠是寻求心理健康服务的退伍军人和军事人员中最常报告的主诉之一。它与医学和精神疾病高度共病,并且与医疗保健利用率和成本的显著增加相关。循证心理治疗,即失眠认知行为疗法(CBTI),是一种有效的治疗方法,比处方睡眠药物更受推荐。虽然CBTI是退伍军人健康管理局在全国范围内推广培训数百名提供者计划的一部分,但由于治疗可及性有限、患者和提供者对治疗选择的了解不足,以及距离和出行、工作安排和儿童保育等退伍军人面临的障碍,许多退伍军人仍然难以获得治疗。在退伍军人事务部(VA)初级保健机构(通常是首次识别和诊断失眠的地方)将一种更简短、对初级保健更友好的治疗方法纳入常规临床护理,可能会有效且高效地增加获得有效失眠干预措施的机会,并有助于降低与慢性失眠相关的风险和负担。
这项I型混合试验有两个目标。第一个目标初步测试失眠简短行为治疗(BBTI)与当前“金标准”治疗CBTI相比的临床非劣效性。第二个目标是在实施研究综合框架(CFIR)的指导下进行定性需求评估,以确定可能影响在初级保健环境中成功实施和整合失眠行为治疗的潜在因素。为了确定潜在的实施因素,对参与临床试验的退伍军人以及VA初级保健提供者和护理人员进行个体访谈。
更好地了解实施失眠干预措施的障碍和促进因素变得越来越重要,以确保退伍军人能够获得最佳的医疗服务。此外,评估新的治疗途径(如在初级保健环境中使用BBTI)的潜力也很重要,这可以使那些可能无法充分接触接受CBTI培训的专科心理健康提供者的退伍军人受益。
ClinicalTrials.gov,标识符:NCT02724800。于2016年3月31日注册。