CSC OnDemand: An Innovative Online Learning Platform for Implementing Coordinated Specialty Care



Status:Completed
Conditions:Psychiatric
Therapuetic Areas:Psychiatry / Psychology
Healthy:No
Age Range:18 - Any
Updated:10/18/2017
Start Date:November 2016
End Date:August 15, 2017

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In response to the growing need for training on interventions to address first episode
psychosis, the Center for Social Innovation (C4) has partnered with experts in Coordinated
Specialty Care (CSC) to develop and test CSC OnDemand: An Innovative Online Learning Platform
for Implementing Coordinated Specialty Care. The product builds on the findings of the
Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode (RAISE) studies, funded by the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH). RAISE examined team-based models of care for people early
in the course of schizophrenia. Through a Fast Track Small Business Innovation Research
(SBIR) grant, investigators will prototype, test, refine, and evaluate the impact of CSC
OnDemand.

Building on existing resources and the expertise of our faculty and advisors, we will develop
CSC OnDemand, a multifaceted online learning product that includes four levels: 1) an online
readiness tool and CSC Learning Hub; 2) dynamic multimedia core curriculum on first episode
psychosis and CSC; 3) live faculty-led online courses; and 4) ongoing support, including an
online community of practice to support peer-to-peer learning.

During Phases I and II of this Fast Track SBIR, we will prototype, pilot test, build out, and
evaluate the product through a cluster randomized non-inferiority study comparing it with
InPerson training.

Phase I will build a robust prototype of the online platform and test it with 15-20 providers
from three sites. This Phase will explore feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary
effectiveness of the product, and will examine which components of the online platform
providers find most useful.

Based on our findings from Phase I, we will refine and fully build out the product to test in
a larger randomized trial. Phase II will use a cluster randomized non-inferiority design to
assess if OnDemand training (n = 20 sites) is comparable to InPerson training (n = 10 sites).
Using a mixed-methods approach, we will examine provider (n = 150) outcomes (satisfaction;
knowledge gains/retention; attitudes toward shared decision making) and client (n = 600)
outcomes (work/school participation; engagement in CSC services; inpatient psychiatric
hospitalizations).

The study is guided by the following specific aims:

Phase I AIM 1: To develop a prototype version of CSC OnDemand. AIM 2: To test the prototype
online platform with a small sample of sites/providers to determine feasibility,
acceptability, and preliminary effectiveness of the product.

Hypothesis: CSC OnDemand will show positive learning and satisfaction outcomes among
providers, and findings will suggest the need for and feasibility of conducting a Phase II
effectiveness trial.

Phase II AIM 1: To refine, expand, and finalize CSC OnDemand based on Phase I findings. AIM
2: To determine if the OnDemand training intervention is as successful as the InPerson
intervention in increasing CSC providers knowledge and shared decision making (SDM).
Hypothesis: Providers in the OnDemand condition will achieve increases in knowledge, SDM and
satisfaction at post training and nine months that will be no more than .5 standard
deviations less than the InPerson condition.

AIM 3: To determine if the OnDemand training intervention is as successful as the InPerson
training in increasing participation in work or school, improving engagement in treatment,
and decreasing relapse rates for participating clients.

Hypothesis: Clients being served by the providers in the OnDemand condition will have
work/school participation rates, levels of engagement and rates of hospitalization nine
months after admission that are no more than 10 percent higher (hospitalization) or lower
(work/school, engagement) than clients served by providers in the InPerson condition.

Inclusion Criteria: (providers in agencies)

- To be eligible, agencies will need to provide:

1. direct care to individuals with early psychosis;

2. administrative-level support for training and use of the CSC model;

3. an entire treatment team that is willing to participate in this team-based
intervention;

4. contact information for direct service staff;

5. support for the study, including a staff person to serve as a liaison to work
with the research team;

6. access to the Internet during the intervention period; and

7. a willingness to provide data and participate in the evaluation.

Exclusion criteria:

1. Teams should not have previously received CSC training.
We found this trial at
1
site
Needham, Massachusetts 02494
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from
Needham, MA
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