Psychiatric Advance Directives for Improved Mental Health Care

This study has been completed.
Sponsor:
Information provided by (Responsible Party):
Department of Veterans Affairs
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT00105794
First received: March 16, 2005
Last updated: April 23, 2012
Last verified: June 2007

March 16, 2005
April 23, 2012
March 2004
 
Rate of involuntary commitment (12 months), perceived coercion (baseline, 1, 6, 12, and rehospitalization), and treatment adherence (baseline and 12 months and record review) [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Involuntary commitment rate
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00105794 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
Satisfaction with inpatient care (baseline, rehospitalization), treatment motivation, working alliance, psychiatric symptoms, PAD completion, PAD content, PAD consulted (hospital record review), psychiatric ER use (12 month record review). [ Designated as safety issue: No ]
Satisfaction with inpatient care (baseline, rehospitalization), treatment motivation, working alliance, psychiatric symptoms, PAD completion, PAD content, PAD consulted (hospital record review), psychiatric ER use (12 month record review).
 
 
 
Psychiatric Advance Directives for Improved Mental Health Care
Psychiatric Advance Directives for Improved Healthcare

During a psychiatric crisis, persons with severe mental illness (SMI) confront complex challenges concerning treatment choices and are often ill equipped or unable to make mental health care decisions. Psychiatric Advance Directives (PADs) are legal documents that allow competent persons to declare their treatment preferences in advance of a mental health crisis, when they may lose capacity to make reliable health care decisions. The use of PADs is consistent with recommendations of the President�s New Freedom Commission on Mental Illness and the Patient Self-Determination Act; 25 states have now adopted PAD legislation. VA does not have a specific policy for PADs or mechanisms to notify veterans of their right to prepare PADs. The downstream effects of PADs on patient care, crisis management, service use, and clinical outcomes are unknown.

Background:

During a psychiatric crisis, persons with severe mental illness (SMI) confront complex challenges concerning treatment choices and are often ill equipped or unable to make mental health care decisions. Psychiatric Advance Directives (PADs) are legal documents that allow competent persons to declare their treatment preferences in advance of a mental health crisis, when they may lose capacity to make reliable health care decisions. The use of PADs is consistent with recommendations of the President�s New Freedom Commission on Mental Illness and the Patient Self-Determination Act; 25 states have now adopted PAD legislation. VA does not have a specific policy for PADs or mechanisms to notify veterans of their right to prepare PADs. The downstream effects of PADs on patient care, crisis management, service use, and clinical outcomes are unknown.

Objectives:

This project examined the effects of a facilitated PAD intervention on guiding patients� treatment during a future mental health crisis, patients� treatment engagement, and patients� mental health service use and clinical outcomes. An additional objective was to describe veterans� preferences for PAD content and completion. Study hypotheses predicted that, as compared to controls, veterans with PAD would have fewer involuntary hospitalizations, great satisfaction with care, less coercion and more autonomy, greater treatment motivation, stronger working alliances, less ER use and fewer rehospitalizations, and improved clinical outcomes.

Methods:

A total of 240 psychiatrically hospitalized veterans with severe mental illness were enrolled in this prospective, randomized, clinical intervention trial: 120 were randomized to �usual care� and received information about PADs; 120 were randomized to the PAD condition. All participants and their clinicians received information about PADs. Those randomized to the PAD condition were also offered the opportunity to complete a facilitated PAD. The facilitated PAD consisted of a 60-minute meeting with a clinician, who provided education about PADs and conducted a semi-structured interview to assess the patient�s wishes and preferences for future treatment during a mental health crisis. The clinician then assisted the patient to prepare a PAD document. Patients in both groups completed follow-up assessments at 1, 6, and 12 months post-enrollment. Those rehospitalized at Durham VAMC during the 12-month follow up period completed an additional assessment interview at each rehospitalization.

Status:

Complete. Activities completed in the past 12 months include collection of follow-up data on final subset of enrollees, extraction of utilization data (clinic stops) at one-year post-enrollment from VA system healthcare database (Austin, TX) and from local healthcare database (CPRS), completion of statistical analyses of outcome measures and preparation of scientific reports summarizing final results.

Interventional
 
Allocation: Randomized
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study
Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment
Masking: Open Label
Primary Purpose: Treatment
  • Schizophrenia
  • Schizoaffective
  • Bipolar Disorder
  • Stress Disorders, Post-traumatic
  • Psychotic Disorders
Procedure: Psychiatric Advance Directives intervention
Arm 1
Intervention: Procedure: Psychiatric Advance Directives intervention
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT Number) in Medline.
 
Completed
360
June 2007
 

Inclusion Criteria:

veteran diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, psychosis NOS, major depression with psychosis, bipolar I, PTSD.

At enrollment, hospitalized at the Durham VAMC psychiatric inpatient unit and receiving or anticipating outpatient treatment at the Durham or Raleigh VA facilities after discharge.

Exclusion Criteria:

Not competent (dementia, guardian, does not pass competency screen) Not followed in VA system for mental health care or available for follow-uo.

Both
18 Years and older
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
United States
 
NCT00105794
PCC 02-054
No
Department of Veterans Affairs
Department of Veterans Affairs
 
Principal Investigator: Jennifer L. Strauss, BA MS PhD Durham VA Medical Center
Department of Veterans Affairs
June 2007

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP