← Back to searchRecruitingRecruiting
Patient Outcome Reporting for Timely Assessments of Life With Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
NCT06479447 · University of Chicago
In plain English
Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.
About this study
Traumatic stress and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are highly prevalent and lead to increases in psychiatric and cardiovascular disease. People residing in environments entrenched in community violence or experiencing assault are at especially high risk of PTSD. However, many people with PTSD are not diagnosed or treated. Current practices for identifying PTSD are subject to bias because diagnosis depends on clinician- or patient-initiated discussion of trauma-related symptoms, and stigma, knowledge, time, and access to resources are often obstacles to these discussions. System-level solutions are needed to increase diagnosis and treatment of PTSD. Systematic screening protocols can help address bias in who is screened. A keystone to screening for PTSD could be to screen patients when they are at clinic visits. While no formal recommendation exists for PTSD screening, clinics who serve patients at a high risk for PTSD, for example, the Veterans Affairs, have implemented screening at clinic visits. Use of patient portals may provide another promising strategy to address barriers to PTSD screening. In the investigators' previous work, a population health approach was used to screen for and assess depression symptoms, employing the patient portal as a tool to reach out to patients. The investigators found that it resulted in a higher screening rate and identified more patients with moderate-severe depression. After identifying patients with PTSD, the next necessary step is to provide evidence-based treatments, like integrated primary-care behavioral health (PCBH). Integrated primary care-behavioral health (PCBH) is a model of care in which the behavioral health and primary care teams are collocated with the primary care clinic and work together to address the biopsychosocial factors that are affecting a patient's health. PCBH has been found to be less stigmatizing for patients with PTSD and models of care that are proactive and provide telephonic care management have been found to increase treatment engagement for PTSD. Thus, coupling screening for PTSD with a PCBH model may be a highly effective strategy to improving PTSD outcomes. Therefore, the investigators' goal is to implement and evaluate a novel strategy for screening and management of PTSD in a primary care setting with a high prevalence of trauma, specifically the South Side of Chicago. In partnership with Chicago Family Health Center, a federally qualified health center (FQHC) with 5 clinical sites and PCBH, the investigators aim to 1) Implement a system-level screening and management strategy for PTSD. The investigators will implement a process of clinic visit and population health screening for PTSD leveraging the patient portal with linkage to care within a PCBH model and 2) Evaluate a system-level screening and management strategy for PTSD. With these aims, this grant will lead to increased understanding of the utility and feasibility of screening and managing PTSD in an FQHC that serves a population with high rates of trauma exposure. If proven effective, the investigators will evaluate this model of care in a multi-center trial of FQHCs.
Eligibility criteria
Patient Inclusion Criteria:
* Age ≥18 years
* Had an appointment at the study site in the last 24 months
* Were not screened for PTSD in the last 12 months
Exclusion Criteria:
* N/A
Study design
Enrollment target: 17000 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2024-07-15
Estimated completion: 2026-07-14
Last updated: 2025-11-10
Interventions
Other: PORTAL-PTSD
Primary outcomes
- • PTSD screening rates (every 6 months post-intervention for 2 years)
- • PTSD diagnoses rates (every 6 months post-intervention for 2 years)
- • PTSD prescribed treatment rates (every 6 months post-intervention for 2 years)
Sponsor
University of Chicago · other
With: Chicago Family Health Center, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)
Contacts & investigators
ContactAinur Kagarmanova, MS, MA · contact · akagarmanova@bsd.uchicago.edu · 5742865712
ContactErin Staab, MPH · contact · estaab@bsd.uchicago.edu · 5072619859
InvestigatorNeda Laiteerapong, MD, MS · principal_investigator, University of Chicago
All locations (2)
CFHC South ChicagoRecruiting
Chicago, Illinois, United States
CFHC Chicago LawnRecruiting
Chicago, Illinois, United States