Conference Coverage

Community programs improve psychosis outcomes


 

Community-based services that tap into local environments not only reduce the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) but also provide improved long-term outcomes for patients with first-episode psychosis (FEP), results of two new studies show.

In the first study, investigators led by Vinod Srihari, MD, director of specialized treatment early in psychosis at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., developed a program to reduce DUP to complement their first-episode service (FES).

Through a combination of mass media and social media campaigns, outreach events with local professionals, and rapid triage, the team was able to nearly halve the time from diagnosis to initiation of antipsychotic treatment.

In the second study, a team led by Delbert G. Robinson, MD, of Hofstra University, Hempstead, N.Y., conducted a 5-year follow-up of RAISE-ETP, the first U.S. randomized trial to compare a 2-year comprehensive early intervention service (EIS) with usual care.

These trial results showed that, among more than 400 FEP patients, the EIS significantly improved both symptoms and quality of life and reduced inpatient days in comparison with standard care.

The research was scheduled to be presented at the Congress of the Schizophrenia International Research Society (SIRS) 2020, but the meeting was canceled because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Norwegian model

Dr. Srihari and colleagues note that a specialized treatment early in psychosis (STEP), which delivers a specialty team–based FES, was established at their institution in 2006.

However, in a bid to reduce DUP, in 2015 they launched MindMap, a 4-year early-detection campaign based on the Scandinavian TIPS Early Detection in Psychosis Study.

Dr. Srihari said in an interview that they visited the team that developed the TIPS program in Norway “to try to understand what elements of their approach had resulted in a successful reduction of DUP.”

He pointed out that the health care system in Norway has “more reliable pathways to care, with an ability to route people in more predictable ways from primary care to secondary care, and so on.”

In the United States, “there’s no expectation that people will go through a primary care provider,” he said. He noted that patients “make their way to specialty care in many different ways.”

Dr. Srihari said, “The other change we realized we’d have to make was that, since TIPS had been completed many years back, the media environment had changed substantially.

“At the time that TIPS was done, there was no such thing as social media, whereas when we began to think about designing our campaign, we thought social media would be a very efficient and also cost-effective way to target young people.”

MindMap, which covered a 10-town catchment area that has a population of 400,000, targeted both demand- and supply-side aspects of DUP. The former focused on delays in identifying illness and help-seeking, and the latter concentrated on referral and treatment access delays.

The researchers used a combination of mass media and social media messaging, professional detailing, and the rapid triage of referrals.

The media campaign included Facebook, Twitter, and other social media platforms that allowed the team to “target individuals in a somewhat more fine-grained way than mass media allows,” Dr. Srihari said. They focused on individuals in a particular age range and geographic location.

The professional detailing encompassed mental health agencies, emergency departments, and inpatient units, as well as colleges, college counseling centers, high schools, and police departments. The team hosted meetings, “often at local restaurants, where we provided a meal and provided some general education about what our mission was,” said Dr. Srihari. The researchers followed up these meetings with more in-person visits.

“The third arm was finding ways to basically eliminate any kind of a waiting time at our front door, such as ensuring that transportation issues were circumvented, in addition to cutting through any ambivalence they might have about finally making the leap to come to the center.”

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