Context-Aware Mobile Intervention for Social Recovery in Serious Mental Illness (R33)
University of California, San Diego
Summary
This randomized clinical trial will test a new technology-supported blended intervention, mobile Social Interaction Therapy by Exposure (mSITE), that targets social engagement in consumers with serious mental illness.
Description
This study evaluates a new technology-supported blended intervention, mobile Social Interaction Therapy by Exposure (mSITE), that targets social behavior, and it also validates several new techniques for measuring social behavior. mSITE blends brief in-person psychotherapy with a context-triggered mobile smartphone intervention and remote telephone coaching. The investigators will conduct a randomized clinical trial of mSITE, evaluating whether the intervention leads to clinically significant changes in the frequency of social interactions in comparison to a therapist and device matched condit…
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18–65 years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: * Voluntary informed consent to participate and capacity to consent; Age 18 to 65; * Diagnosis of schizophrenia, schizoaffective, bipolar I disorder or major depression with history of psychosis based on a diagnostic interview and available medical record review; * Minimum level of social avoidance defined by a score of ≥ 2 on the Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS) asociality item; * Be willing and able to speak English at ≥ 6th grade reading level (to read intervention workbook). Exclusion Criteria: * Prior cognitive-behavioral therapy in the past 2 ye…
Interventions
- BehavioralMobile Intervention for Social Recovery in Serious Mental Illness (mSITE)
mSITE is a blended intervention that integrates a brief in-person psychotherapy with context-triggered mobile smartphone intervention and remote telephone coaching. Participants will attend weekly, in-person sessions for 8 weeks and then 15-minute, remote coaching sessions for 10 weeks. The intervention begins with setting a meaningful recovery goal and then the generic cognitive model is introduced and a simple thought challenging skill is trained to specifically address social avoidance behaviors and facilitate work toward recovery goals. Defeatist attitudes, social threat and avoidance behaviors that interfere with working on the goal are then modified using cognitive-behavioral therapy skills and practiced using role-plays.
- BehavioralSupportive Contact (SC)
The SC arm will match the mSITE arm on the same amount of individual in-person and coaching, and mobile device contact. Coaching sessions will be semi-structured and consist of setting recovery goals, check-in about symptoms and potential crisis management, flexible discussion involving psychoeducation, instructions for accessing community crisis lines and community resources, and symptom management behaviors that grow out of discussions, with only minimal therapist guidance.
Location
- University of California - San DiegoSan Diego, California