TY - JOUR
T1 - Randomised controlled trial of the Community Navigator programme to reduce loneliness and depression for adults with treatment-resistant depression in secondary community mental health services
T2 - trial protocol
AU - Stefanidou, Theodora
AU - Ambler, Gareth
AU - Bartl, Gergely
AU - Barber, Nick
AU - Billings, Jo
AU - Bogatsu, Tumelo
AU - Carroll, Richard
AU - Chipp, Beverley
AU - Conneely, Maev
AU - Downey, Anne-Marie
AU - Evlat, Gamze
AU - Hunter, Rachael
AU - Le Novere, Marie
AU - Lewis, Glyn
AU - Mackay, Tanya
AU - Marwaha, Steven
AU - Matin, Zubair
AU - Naughton, Georgia
AU - Nekitsing, Chandani
AU - O’Sullivan, Millie
AU - Pinfold, Vanessa
AU - Pan, Shengning
AU - Sobers, Angela
AU - Thompson, Keith J.
AU - Vasikaran, Jerusaa
AU - Webber, Martin
AU - Johnson, Sonia
AU - Lloyd-Evans, Brynmor
PY - 2023/10/6
Y1 - 2023/10/6
N2 - Background: New treatments are needed for people with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), who do not benefit from anti-depressants and many of whom do not recover fully with psychological treatments. The Community Navigator programme was co-produced with service users and practitioners. It is a novel social intervention which aims to reduce loneliness and thus improve health outcomes for people with TRD. Participants receive up to 10 individual meetings with a Community Navigator, who helps them to map their social world and set and enact goals to enhance their social connections and reduce loneliness. Participants may also access group meet-ups with others in the programme every 2 months, and may be offered modest financial support to enable activities to support social connections. Methods: A researcher-blind, multi-site, 1:1 randomised controlled trial with N = 306 participants will test the effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme for people with TRD in secondary community mental health teams (CMHTs). Our primary hypothesis is that people who are offered the Community Navigator programme as an addition to usual CMHT care will be less depressed, assessed using the PHQ-9 self-report measure, at 8-month, end-of-treatment follow-up, compared to a control group receiving usual CMHT care and a booklet with information about local social groups and activities. We will follow participants up at end-of-treatment and at 14 months, 6 months after end-of-treatment follow-up. Secondary outcomes include the following: loneliness, anxiety, personal recovery, self-efficacy, social network, social identities. We will collect data about health-related quality of life and service use to investigate the cost-effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme. Discussion: This trial will provide definitive evidence about the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme and whether it can be recommended for use in practice. The trial is due to finish in August 2025. Trial registration: Prospectively registered on 8th July 2022 at: ISRCTN13205972.
AB - Background: New treatments are needed for people with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), who do not benefit from anti-depressants and many of whom do not recover fully with psychological treatments. The Community Navigator programme was co-produced with service users and practitioners. It is a novel social intervention which aims to reduce loneliness and thus improve health outcomes for people with TRD. Participants receive up to 10 individual meetings with a Community Navigator, who helps them to map their social world and set and enact goals to enhance their social connections and reduce loneliness. Participants may also access group meet-ups with others in the programme every 2 months, and may be offered modest financial support to enable activities to support social connections. Methods: A researcher-blind, multi-site, 1:1 randomised controlled trial with N = 306 participants will test the effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme for people with TRD in secondary community mental health teams (CMHTs). Our primary hypothesis is that people who are offered the Community Navigator programme as an addition to usual CMHT care will be less depressed, assessed using the PHQ-9 self-report measure, at 8-month, end-of-treatment follow-up, compared to a control group receiving usual CMHT care and a booklet with information about local social groups and activities. We will follow participants up at end-of-treatment and at 14 months, 6 months after end-of-treatment follow-up. Secondary outcomes include the following: loneliness, anxiety, personal recovery, self-efficacy, social network, social identities. We will collect data about health-related quality of life and service use to investigate the cost-effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme. Discussion: This trial will provide definitive evidence about the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the Community Navigator programme and whether it can be recommended for use in practice. The trial is due to finish in August 2025. Trial registration: Prospectively registered on 8th July 2022 at: ISRCTN13205972.
KW - Depression
KW - Loneliness
KW - Community navigator
KW - Randomised controlled trial
U2 - 10.1186/s13063-023-07684-4
DO - 10.1186/s13063-023-07684-4
M3 - Article
SN - 1745-6215
VL - 24
JO - Trials
JF - Trials
IS - 1
M1 - 652
ER -