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Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability

BACKGROUND: African-Caribbeans in the UK have the highest schizophrenia incidence and greatest inequity in access to mental health services of all ethnic groups. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) highlights this crisis in care and urgent need to improve evidence-based ment...

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Autores principales: Edge, Dawn, Degnan, Amy, Cotterill, Sarah, Berry, Katherine, Drake, Richard, Baker, John, Barrowclough, Christine, Hughes-Morley, Adwoa, Grey, Paul, Bhugra, Dinesh, Cahoon, Patrick, Tarrier, Nicholas, Lewis, Shôn, Abel, Kathryn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5154101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27965857
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-016-0070-2
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author Edge, Dawn
Degnan, Amy
Cotterill, Sarah
Berry, Katherine
Drake, Richard
Baker, John
Barrowclough, Christine
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa
Grey, Paul
Bhugra, Dinesh
Cahoon, Patrick
Tarrier, Nicholas
Lewis, Shôn
Abel, Kathryn
author_facet Edge, Dawn
Degnan, Amy
Cotterill, Sarah
Berry, Katherine
Drake, Richard
Baker, John
Barrowclough, Christine
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa
Grey, Paul
Bhugra, Dinesh
Cahoon, Patrick
Tarrier, Nicholas
Lewis, Shôn
Abel, Kathryn
author_sort Edge, Dawn
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: African-Caribbeans in the UK have the highest schizophrenia incidence and greatest inequity in access to mental health services of all ethnic groups. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) highlights this crisis in care and urgent need to improve evidence-based mental healthcare, experiences of services and outcomes for this group. Family intervention (FI) is clinically and cost-effective for the management of schizophrenia but it is rarely offered. Evidence for FI with minority ethnic groups generally, and African-Caribbeans in particular, is lacking. This study aims to test the feasibility and acceptability of delivering Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) to African-Caribbean service users diagnosed with schizophrenia. METHODS/DESIGN: This is a feasibility cohort design study. Over a 12-month intervention period, 30 service users and their families, recruited from hospital and community settings, will receive ten one-hourly sessions of CaFI. Where biological families are absent, access to the intervention will be optimised through ‘family support members’; trusted individuals nominated by service users or study volunteers. We shall collect data on eligibility, uptake, retention and attrition and assess the utility and feasibility of collecting various outcome measures including readmission, service engagement, working alliance, clinical symptoms and functioning, perceived criticism, psychosis knowledge, familial stress and economic costs. Measures will be collected at baseline, post-intervention and at 3-month follow-up using validated questionnaires and standardised interviews. Admission rates and change in care management will be rated by independent case note examination. Variability in the measures will inform sample size estimates for a future trial. Independent raters will assess fidelity to the intervention in 10 % of sessions. Feedback at the end of each session along with thematically-analysed qualitative interviews will examine CaFI’s acceptability to service users, families and healthcare professionals. DISCUSSION: This innovative response to inequalities in mental healthcare experienced by African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia might improve engagement in services, access to evidence-based interventions and clinical outcomes. Successful implementation of CaFI in this group could pave the way for better engagement and provision across marginalised groups and therefore has potentially important implications for commissioning and service delivery in ethnically diverse populations. This study will demonstrate whether the approach is feasible and acceptable and can be implemented with fidelity in different settings.
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spelling pubmed-51541012016-12-13 Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability Edge, Dawn Degnan, Amy Cotterill, Sarah Berry, Katherine Drake, Richard Baker, John Barrowclough, Christine Hughes-Morley, Adwoa Grey, Paul Bhugra, Dinesh Cahoon, Patrick Tarrier, Nicholas Lewis, Shôn Abel, Kathryn Pilot Feasibility Stud Study Protocol BACKGROUND: African-Caribbeans in the UK have the highest schizophrenia incidence and greatest inequity in access to mental health services of all ethnic groups. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) highlights this crisis in care and urgent need to improve evidence-based mental healthcare, experiences of services and outcomes for this group. Family intervention (FI) is clinically and cost-effective for the management of schizophrenia but it is rarely offered. Evidence for FI with minority ethnic groups generally, and African-Caribbeans in particular, is lacking. This study aims to test the feasibility and acceptability of delivering Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) to African-Caribbean service users diagnosed with schizophrenia. METHODS/DESIGN: This is a feasibility cohort design study. Over a 12-month intervention period, 30 service users and their families, recruited from hospital and community settings, will receive ten one-hourly sessions of CaFI. Where biological families are absent, access to the intervention will be optimised through ‘family support members’; trusted individuals nominated by service users or study volunteers. We shall collect data on eligibility, uptake, retention and attrition and assess the utility and feasibility of collecting various outcome measures including readmission, service engagement, working alliance, clinical symptoms and functioning, perceived criticism, psychosis knowledge, familial stress and economic costs. Measures will be collected at baseline, post-intervention and at 3-month follow-up using validated questionnaires and standardised interviews. Admission rates and change in care management will be rated by independent case note examination. Variability in the measures will inform sample size estimates for a future trial. Independent raters will assess fidelity to the intervention in 10 % of sessions. Feedback at the end of each session along with thematically-analysed qualitative interviews will examine CaFI’s acceptability to service users, families and healthcare professionals. DISCUSSION: This innovative response to inequalities in mental healthcare experienced by African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia might improve engagement in services, access to evidence-based interventions and clinical outcomes. Successful implementation of CaFI in this group could pave the way for better engagement and provision across marginalised groups and therefore has potentially important implications for commissioning and service delivery in ethnically diverse populations. This study will demonstrate whether the approach is feasible and acceptable and can be implemented with fidelity in different settings. BioMed Central 2016-08-03 /pmc/articles/PMC5154101/ /pubmed/27965857 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-016-0070-2 Text en © The Author(s). 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Edge, Dawn
Degnan, Amy
Cotterill, Sarah
Berry, Katherine
Drake, Richard
Baker, John
Barrowclough, Christine
Hughes-Morley, Adwoa
Grey, Paul
Bhugra, Dinesh
Cahoon, Patrick
Tarrier, Nicholas
Lewis, Shôn
Abel, Kathryn
Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title_full Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title_fullStr Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title_full_unstemmed Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title_short Culturally-adapted Family Intervention (CaFI) for African-Caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
title_sort culturally-adapted family intervention (cafi) for african-caribbeans diagnosed with schizophrenia and their families: a feasibility study protocol of implementation and acceptability
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5154101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27965857
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40814-016-0070-2
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