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Prevention of Psychological Health Problems Via Integrated Operational Support
NCT06981598 · New York University
In plain English
Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.
Official title
Optimizing Psychological Health and Preventing Clinical Problems: Testing the Effectiveness of an Evidence-Based Toolkit for Integrated Operational Support
About this study
This study is conducted in collaboration with the Department of the Air Force (DAF) Medical Service to enhance the effectiveness of embedded behavioral health (BH) technicians in operational units. The initiative aligns with military health goals by embedding paraprofessional BH technicians within line units to improve service member (SM) access to mental health care, reduce stigma, and address risk factors such as sleep disorders, stress, trauma, and suicide prevention. However, variability in training and intervention delivery has limited their effectiveness. This research aims to test evidence-based training (EBT) approaches for BH technicians, equipping them with validated intervention tools and engagement techniques to improve SM psychological well-being, stress management, and service satisfaction.
The research builds on previous findings showing that embedded BH technicians increase accessibility and reduce stigma but often lack standardized training and structured intervention tools. The study will use a randomized controlled trial (RCT) design to compare trained vs. untrained BH technicians, assessing their adoption of evidence-based interventions (EBIs) and the resulting impact on SM well-being. The CBPR advisory board, which has guided the development of the IOS EBI Toolkit, will continue its role in refining training methods and implementation. Additionally, a patient advocate consultant, who has experienced suicidality, PTSD, and sleep disorders, will contribute to recruitment strategies and intervention refinement. This approach ensures that training is optimized for real-world military settings, increasing adoption and effectiveness.
The study's objectives are to evaluate whether EBI training improves BH technicians' adoption of intervention tools and SM outcomes, test whether BH technician competency mediates SM improvement, and deliver empirically supported training protocols to the DAF. The research aims to enhance the quality and impact of BH services in operational units, ultimately improving SM resilience, recovery, and mission readiness. By formalizing structured training programs and evidence-based engagement strategies, this initiative seeks to standardize and optimize the role of embedded BH technicians, ensuring they effectively support service members' mental health needs. If successful, these training protocols will be scaled for military-wide implementation, contributing to long-term mental health improvements across the DAF and broader military community.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* Service members seeing a behavioral health (BH) technician.
* Currently embedded BH technicians.
Exclusion Criteria:
* Service members who are not currently seeing a BH technician.
* BH technicians who are not embedded or have taken a clinic role.
Study design
Enrollment target: 5586 participants
Allocation: na
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2025-03-10
Estimated completion: 2028-03-01
Last updated: 2025-05-21
Interventions
Behavioral: Cognitive Behavioral Coaching Training
Primary outcomes
- • Average Satisfaction of Service Members (SM) with Embedded Behavioral Health Technician (BHT) Services (From the SM's first session with their embedded BHT to their last session (up to 10 weeks))
- • Change in Service Member PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire-9) Score (From the SM's first session with their embedded BHT to one month after their last session with their embedded BHT (up to 14 months after the completion of the baseline survey after the first appointment with their embedded BHT))
- • Change in Service Member WHO-5 Well-being Index Score (From the SM's first session with their embedded BHT to one month after their last session with their embedded BHT (up to 14 months after the completion of the baseline survey after the first appointment with their embedded BHT))
Sponsor
New York University · other
Contacts & investigators
ContactKelly Daly, PhD · contact · kd2691@nyu.edu · 914-806-5093
ContactAna Ivic, LMSW · contact · ai679@nyu.edu · 9143195245
InvestigatorAmy S Slep, PhD · principal_investigator, NYU
All locations (1)
New York UniversityRecruiting
New York, New York, United States