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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT05407051
NA

Family-Centered Treatment for Depression in Hispanic Youth

Sponsor: MetroHealth Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Studies suggest that for youth in poverty, addressing stressors like parental mental health concerns may improve children's mental health outcomes. Rates of depression and suicidality are growing among teens nationwide and rates of depression are disproportionately high for Hispanic youth. Hispanic families are disproportionately impacted by poverty and are disproportionately exposed to adverse childhood experiences, yet Hispanic patients are less likely than non-Hispanic patient to have access to specialty mental healthcare. Integrating mental health care into primary care is one avenue towards making specialized mental healthcare more accessible to the Hispanic community. There have been few studies focused on addressing parental mental health within pediatric primary care, and even fewer focused specifically on supporting Hispanic families within primary care. The current study would seek to formally assess whether a family-centered treatment approach improves depression outcomes for both Hispanic teens and parents identified in primary care. The current study would implement depression screening for teens and global mental health screening for parents in MetroHealth's Pediatric Hispanic Clinic. Teens identified with depression would receive integrated consultation with a psychology provider as usual. In this study, parents who agree to participate would also be screened for depression, anxiety, trauma and parenting stress. Parents who screen positive would then be randomized to receive either a list of referrals for bilingual mental health services in the community (treatment as usual), or into the family-centered treatment arm. In the family-centered treatment arm, parents would be connected directly to bilingual adult mental health services with a community partner, Catholic Charities, who would provide collateral therapy to parents via telehealth. Families will then receive follow-up calls from a bilingual MetroHealth provider 3- and 6-months later to re-administer the same parent outcome measures. Investigators hypothesize that adolescent depression symptoms will improve to a greater degree in the family-centered treatment condition as compared to treatment as usual, and that measures of parental mental health and parenting stress will show significantly greater improvement in the family-centered treatment condition as compared to treatment as usual.

Official title: Investigating Effects of Family-Centered Treatment for Depression in Primary Care for Hispanic Youth

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

41

Start Date

2022-09-30

Completion Date

2024-10-31

Last Updated

2024-07-12

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Family Centered Treatment

In the Family-Centered Treatment Arm, parents would be given the same list of mental health referrals and crisis numbers, but in this condition, they would authorize researchers to share their contact information with the partner agency, Catholic Charities, and would then be linked directly to bilingual adult mental health services there with a behavioral health provider who would provide collateral therapy to parents via telehealth. Although parents will be referred to the community partner for therapy as a part of the research intervention, the behavioral health providers at the community partner will be providing therapy as they usually do for these participants in line with their usual job duties.

BEHAVIORAL

Treatment as Usual

All participants (parents) would receive follow-up calls from a MetroHealth research personnel at 3 months and 6 months to measure changes in parent mental health outcomes, as well as satisfaction. Children of parents in both conditions will receive treatment as usual which includes brief consultation for 3-5 sessions with an integrated MetroHealth behavioral health provider which is already standard practice in the clinic. Sessions typically occur monthly. Teens will be re-administered the Patient Health Questionnaire -9 by the integrated behavioral health provider as a part of clinical practice to measure treatment progress and this information will be obtained at the end of 6 months of treatment via chart review (see data sheet). Repeated measurement of patient's symptoms over the course of several months of treatment is common in clinical practice to measure patient's symptom improvement.

Locations (1)

MetroHealth Medical Center

Cleveland, Ohio, United States