Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial

 

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dc.contributor.author Fairall, Lara
dc.contributor.author Petersen, Inge
dc.contributor.author Zani, Babalwa
dc.contributor.author Folb, Naomi
dc.contributor.author Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella
dc.contributor.author Selohilwe, One
dc.contributor.author Petrus, Ruwayda
dc.contributor.author Mntambo, Ntokozo
dc.contributor.author Bhana, Arvin
dc.contributor.author Lombard, Carl
dc.contributor.author Bachmann, Max
dc.contributor.author Lund, Crick
dc.contributor.author Hanass-Hancock, Jill
dc.contributor.author Chisholm, Daniel
dc.contributor.author McCrone, Paul
dc.contributor.author Carmona, Sergio
dc.contributor.author Gaziano, Thomas
dc.contributor.author Levitt, Naomi
dc.contributor.author Kathree, Tasneem
dc.contributor.author Thornicroft, Graham
dc.date.accessioned 2018-05-04T09:35:14Z
dc.date.available 2018-05-04T09:35:14Z
dc.date.issued 2018-03-22
dc.identifier.citation Fairall, L., Petersen, I., Zani, B., Folb, N., Georgeu-Pepper, D., Selohilwe, O., ... & Bachmann, M. (2018). Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial. Trials, 19(1), 193.
dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2517-7
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27934
dc.description.abstract Background The scale-up of antiretroviral treatment (ART) programmes has seen HIV/AIDS transition to a chronic condition characterised by high rates of comorbidity with tuberculosis, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and mental health disorders. Depression is one such disorder that is associated with higher rates of non-adherence, progression to AIDS and greater mortality. Detection and treatment of comorbid depression is critical to achieve viral load suppression in more than 90% of those on ART and is in line with the recent 90-90-90 Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) targets. The CobALT trial aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of scalable interventions to reduce the treatment gap posed by the growing burden of depression among adults on lifelong ART. Methods The study design is a pragmatic, parallel group, stratified, cluster randomised trial in 40 clinics across two rural districts of the North West Province of South Africa. The unit of randomisation is the clinic, with outcomes measured among 2000 patients on ART who screen positive for depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Control group clinics are implementing the South African Department of Health’s Integrated Clinical Services Management model, which aims to reduce fragmentation of care in the context of rising multimorbidity, and which includes training in the Primary Care 101 (PC101) guide covering communicable diseases, NCDs, women’s health and mental disorders. In intervention clinics, we supplemented this with training specifically in the mental health components of PC101 and clinical communications skills training to support nurse-led chronic care. We strengthened the referral pathways through the introduction of a clinic-based behavioural health counsellor equipped to provide manualised depression counselling (eight sessions, individual or group), as well as adherence counselling sessions (one session, individual). The co-primary patient outcomes are a reduction in PHQ-9 scores of at least 50% from baseline and viral load suppression rates measured at 6 and 12 months, respectively. Discussion The trial will provide real-world effectiveness of case detection and collaborative care for depression including facility-based counselling on the mental and physical outcomes for people on lifelong ART in resource-constrained settings. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT02407691 ) registered on 19 March 2015; Pan African Clinical Trials Registry ( 201504001078347 ) registered on 19/03/2015; South African National Clinical Trials Register (SANCTR) ( DOH-27-0515-5048 ) NHREC number 4048 issued on 21/04/2015.
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher BioMed Central
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.source Trials
dc.source.uri https://trialsjournal.biomedcentral.com/
dc.subject.other Antiretroviral therapy
dc.subject.other Viral load
dc.subject.other Depression
dc.subject.other Mental health gap
dc.subject.other Primary healthcare
dc.subject.other Pragmatic trials
dc.subject.other Low- and middle-income countries
dc.subject.other Implementation science
dc.title Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial
dc.type Journal Article
dc.date.updated 2018-04-09T15:13:12Z
dc.rights.holder The Author(s).
dc.publisher.institution University of Cape Town
dc.publisher.faculty Faculty of Health Sciences en_ZA
dc.publisher.department Department of Medicine en_ZA
uct.type.filetype Text
uct.type.filetype Image
dc.identifier.apacitation Fairall, L., Petersen, I., Zani, B., Folb, N., Georgeu-Pepper, D., Selohilwe, O., ... Thornicroft, G. (2018). Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial. <i>Trials</i>, http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27934 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Fairall, Lara, Inge Petersen, Babalwa Zani, Naomi Folb, Daniella Georgeu-Pepper, One Selohilwe, Ruwayda Petrus, et al "Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial." <i>Trials</i> (2018) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27934 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Fairall L, Petersen I, Zani B, Folb N, Georgeu-Pepper D, Selohilwe O, et al. Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial. Trials. 2018; http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27934. en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Journal Article AU - Fairall, Lara AU - Petersen, Inge AU - Zani, Babalwa AU - Folb, Naomi AU - Georgeu-Pepper, Daniella AU - Selohilwe, One AU - Petrus, Ruwayda AU - Mntambo, Ntokozo AU - Bhana, Arvin AU - Lombard, Carl AU - Bachmann, Max AU - Lund, Crick AU - Hanass-Hancock, Jill AU - Chisholm, Daniel AU - McCrone, Paul AU - Carmona, Sergio AU - Gaziano, Thomas AU - Levitt, Naomi AU - Kathree, Tasneem AU - Thornicroft, Graham AB - Background The scale-up of antiretroviral treatment (ART) programmes has seen HIV/AIDS transition to a chronic condition characterised by high rates of comorbidity with tuberculosis, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and mental health disorders. Depression is one such disorder that is associated with higher rates of non-adherence, progression to AIDS and greater mortality. Detection and treatment of comorbid depression is critical to achieve viral load suppression in more than 90% of those on ART and is in line with the recent 90-90-90 Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) targets. The CobALT trial aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of scalable interventions to reduce the treatment gap posed by the growing burden of depression among adults on lifelong ART. Methods The study design is a pragmatic, parallel group, stratified, cluster randomised trial in 40 clinics across two rural districts of the North West Province of South Africa. The unit of randomisation is the clinic, with outcomes measured among 2000 patients on ART who screen positive for depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Control group clinics are implementing the South African Department of Health’s Integrated Clinical Services Management model, which aims to reduce fragmentation of care in the context of rising multimorbidity, and which includes training in the Primary Care 101 (PC101) guide covering communicable diseases, NCDs, women’s health and mental disorders. In intervention clinics, we supplemented this with training specifically in the mental health components of PC101 and clinical communications skills training to support nurse-led chronic care. We strengthened the referral pathways through the introduction of a clinic-based behavioural health counsellor equipped to provide manualised depression counselling (eight sessions, individual or group), as well as adherence counselling sessions (one session, individual). The co-primary patient outcomes are a reduction in PHQ-9 scores of at least 50% from baseline and viral load suppression rates measured at 6 and 12 months, respectively. Discussion The trial will provide real-world effectiveness of case detection and collaborative care for depression including facility-based counselling on the mental and physical outcomes for people on lifelong ART in resource-constrained settings. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov ( NCT02407691 ) registered on 19 March 2015; Pan African Clinical Trials Registry ( 201504001078347 ) registered on 19/03/2015; South African National Clinical Trials Register (SANCTR) ( DOH-27-0515-5048 ) NHREC number 4048 issued on 21/04/2015. DA - 2018-03-22 DB - OpenUCT DO - 10.1186/s13063-018-2517-7 DP - University of Cape Town J1 - Trials LK - https://open.uct.ac.za PB - University of Cape Town PY - 2018 T1 - Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial TI - Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial UR - http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27934 ER - en_ZA


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