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NCT06043778
NA

Digital Implementation Support to Achieve Uptake and Integration of Task-Shared Care for Schizophrenia in Primary Care in India

Sponsor: Harvard Medical School (HMS and HSDM)

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Schizophrenia represents a significant contributor to the global burden of disease, with this burden disproportionately impacting low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). In India, the burden due to schizophrenia is further exacerbated by low access to effective psychosocial interventions aimed at promoting recovery, rehabilitation, and community tenure, as well as inadequate attention to managing co-occurring chronic medical conditions that result in significantly reduced life expectancy among those living with schizophrenia compared to the general population. A major driver of these alarming gaps in access to care for persons with schizophrenia in India is the limited capacity within primary care settings aimed at addressing the complex co-occurring mental health, physical health, and functional needs of this patient population. There now exists strong evidence demonstrating that community programs delivered in primary care and leveraging psychosocial interventions combined with linkage to specialty psychiatric services are effective for supporting treatment and recovery of schizophrenia in low-resource settings. We will leverage our existing collaboration and robust research infrastructure in both rural and urban settings in Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka, India to conduct a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation trial to evaluate whether the use of a digital platform offers added clinical benefit and can support integration of this task shared care for schizophrenia into routine primary care settings. We will address the following aims: 1) evaluate whether the use of the mindLAMP digital platform can enhance the clinical effectiveness of task-shared community-based psychosocial rehabilitation (COPSI) for individuals with schizophrenia, and 2) determine whether the addition of mindLAMP to the delivery of the COPSI program has an impact on implementation metrics when compared to delivery of COPSI alone.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

240

Start Date

2026-07

Completion Date

2029-03-31

Last Updated

2026-02-12

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Community care for People with Schizophrenia in India (COPSI)

This intervention is designed to promote collaboration between the person with schizophrenia, their caregivers and the treatment team to deliver a flexible, individualized, and needs-based intervention. The COPSI intervention will be delivered by Community Health Officers in three phases: intensive engagement (0-3 months), stabilization phase (4-7 months), and maintenance phase (8-12).

BEHAVIORAL

mindLAMP Mobile Application

Participants in COPSI plus mindLAMP arm will have access to COPSI and the mindLAMP mobile application. mindLAMP has already been co-developed and culturally adapted by patients, family members, and clinicians at both Indian sites. Materials (articles, videos, web links, audio files, etc.) will be available on-demand and can be accessed by patients at any time. Community Health Officers will also schedule content to specific participants to promote engagement.