Last reviewed · How we verify

NCT02299492: PCCP

Person-Centered Care Planning and Service Engagement

Completed NA Last updated 1 November 2022
What this trial tests

NA trial testing Person Centered Care Planning in Severe Mental Illness in 570 participants. Completed in 1 December 2019.

Timeline
1 September 2013
Primary endpoint
1 February 2019
1 December 2019

Quick facts

Lead sponsorNew York University
PhaseNA
StatusCompleted
Study typeINTERVENTIONAL
Allocationrandomized
Designparallel
Maskingnone
Primary purposehealth services research
Enrollment570
Start date1 September 2013
Primary completion1 February 2019
Estimated completion1 December 2019
Sites1 location across United States

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

New York University

Who can join

18 and older, any sex, with Severe Mental Illness. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

This proposed study addresses the problem of service disengagement within the mental health system. No matter how effective mental health practices are now or become in the future, they are of little value should persons with mental illnesses continue to choose not to receive them. Consumers have attributed their disengagement from care to having poor alliances with care providers, including experiences of not being listened to and not being offered the opportunity to make decisions and collaborate in their own treatment. Person-centered care planning is a field-tested intervention designed to maximize consumer choice and ownership of the treatment process. Providers collaborate with consumers to develop customized plans that identify life goals and potential barriers to achieving them. The proposed study tests the effectiveness of Person-Centered Care Planning (PCCP) designed to target barriers and efficiently implement PCCP throughout an agency. By conducting a randomized controlled trial with 14 community mental health clinics from two states, the study will assess whether PCCP improves service engagement and consumer outcomes. The study will also utilize qualitative methods to understand how care planning impacts service engagement and how implementation processes influence organizational and provider level behavior. Designed to bridge the science to services gap, this study focuses on two priorities identified by the NIMH Diversion of Services and Intervention Research: developing models and methods to implement effective mental health services in the community and the study of personalized mental health care.

Publications & conference data

4 peer-reviewed publications reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):

  1. Delivering person-centered care with an electronic health record.
    Stanhope V, Matthews EB. · · 2019 · cited 27× · PMID 31438960 · DOI 10.1186/s12911-019-0897-6
  2. Person-centered care planning and service engagement: a study protocol for a randomized controlled trial.
    Stanhope V, Tondora J, Davidson L, Choy-Brown M, et al · · 2015 · cited 20× · PMID 25897762 · DOI 10.1186/s13063-015-0715-0
  3. Implementing Person-Centered Care Planning: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
    Stanhope V, Choy-Brown M, Williams N, Marcus SC. · · 2021 · cited 10× · PMID 33765860 · DOI 10.1176/appi.ps.202000361
  4. Developing a Tool to Measure Person-Centered Care in Service Planning.
    Stanhope V, Baslock D, Tondora J, Jessell L, et al · · 2021 · cited 8× · PMID 34408678 · DOI 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.681597

Verify or expand the search:

Other recruiting trials for Severe Mental Illness

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other New York University trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

Verify against primary sources

Data sources for this page

Drug Landscape aggregates and links these public records for informational use only. Always verify against the primary source before clinical or regulatory decisions. Canonical URL: https://druglandscape.com/trial/NCT02299492.

Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing