Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 7-12 (full criteria)
Healthy Volunteers
healthy people welcome
Location
at UCSD
Dates
study started
completion around

Description

Summary

This project aims to follow up on a prior project examining the impact of training therapists in an executive functioning intervention Unstuck and On Target (UOT) adapted for community mental health settings. Study aims are to test the clinical and implementation effectiveness of training mental health therapists in Unstuck and On Target, an executive functioning intervention, relative to Unified Protocol for Children, a transdiagnostic intervention for emotional disorders. This includes examining the implementation of Unstuck and associated outcomes (e.g., effective delivery, expanded use of Unstuck beyond autism, the feasibility of Unstuck) and impact on changes in child executive functioning and behaviors.

Details

Autism is a highly prevalent neurodevelopmental condition, affecting 1 in 36 youth. The annual cost in the U.S. of autism was $223 billion in 2020 and is estimated to rise to $589 billion by 2030. Outcomes are poor and care disparities and high rates of unmet service needs are common. Mental health services play a key role in caring for autistic youth. There have been efforts to develop evidence-based interventions (EBIs) with the potential to lessen the public health burden of autism. Yet, research indicates limited community EBI penetration. Several work gaps remain, including a focus on EBIs designed for community implementation and those addressing multilevel barriers impeding EBI use. There is an urgent need to focus on EBIs that improve mental health services for autism and optimize outcomes for this priority, complex population. Executive functioning (EF) is a potent mechanism underlying autism and commonly co-occurring mental health conditions. EF impairments (e.g., inflexibility, poor goal setting, poor planning) contribute to negative outcomes spanning multiple areas (e.g., academic, vocational, health). Our work underscores the impact of EF deficits on mental health services, including its transdiagnostic impact on the majority of children served in this setting and its role as a barrier to psychotherapy engagement and progress. EF is responsive to treatment, and mental health therapists cite a significant need and motivation for EF treatments, making EF EBIs highly relevant for community mental health settings. However, EF EBIs have not been widely used and tested in such settings. Autism EBIs, or those developed or adapted for autistic youth, have the potential to enhance mental health services, in addition to improving service quality for the populations targeted (e.g., autism). This is due to the specific components and strategies incorporated into the EBI to enhance its impact and fit. We propose a Hybrid Type 2 randomized trial examining the effectiveness and implementation of an autism EF EBI (Unstuck and On Target) in community mental health settings. Unstuck and On Target is a cognitive-behavioral EF intervention effective for autism.

With NIMH funding (K23MH115100;), Unstuck and On Target were systematically adapted for and tested in mental health settings, with a pilot test suggesting its preliminary effectiveness, high fidelity, and use beyond autism. Findings have the potential to transform implementation and service quality for the high-priority population of autistic youth as well as youth generally. Aim 1. Evaluate the effectiveness and implementation of an autism EBI (Unstuck and On Target), relative to a non-autism transdiagnostic intervention (Unified Protocol for Children) for autistic youth. Aim 2. Evaluate mediators of EBI training effects to confirm engaged change mechanisms of clinical and implementation outcomes. Aim 3. Explore the generalized effects of EBI training on reach and improved psychotherapy quality with non-autistic youth.

Keywords

Autism Spectrum Disorder, Executive Functioning, emotion regulation, mental health symptoms, Unified Protcol for Children, Unstuck and On Target, evidence based intervention

Eligibility

For people ages 7-12

Inclusion Criteria:

Mental Health Programs:

  • Publicly-funded
  • Providing outpatient or school-based psychotherapy services to children
  • Have at least 8 mental health providers on staff

Therapists:

  • Employed as staff or trainee at a participating program
  • Employed at the program for at least the next 12 months
  • Providing psychotherapy services to children
  • Has an eligible child on current caseload (see below)

Autistic Child/Caregiver Participants (enrolled in a dyad with a participating therapist):

  • Child age 7-12 years
  • Receiving services from an enrolled therapist
  • Documented or suspected* autism diagnosis
    • In the event of suspected autism diagnosis, the presence of elevated autism symptoms on the Social Responsiveness Scale-2nd Edition or the Autism Diagnostic Observation Scale-2nd Edition

Non-Autistic Child/Caregiver Participants (enrolled in a dyad with a participating therapist):

  • Child age 7-12 years
  • Receiving services from an enrolled provider
  • No history of documented or suspected autism diagnosis

Locations

  • San Diego State University
    San Diego California 92182 United States
  • University of Colorado - Anschutz
    Aurora Colorado 80045 United States

Details

Status
not yet accepting patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
San Diego State University
ID
NCT06651086
Study Type
Interventional
Participants
Expecting 672 study participants
Last Updated