Implementing Illness Management And Recovery Within Assertive Community Treatment: A Pilot Trial Of Feasibility And Effectiveness

Abstract

Objective: In a pilot feasibility and effectiveness study, illness management and recovery (IMR), a curriculum-based program to help people with serious mental illness pursue personal recovery goals, was integrated into assertive community treatment (ACT) to improve participants' recovery and functioning. Methods: A small-scale cluster randomized controlled design was used to test implementation of IMR within ACT teams in two states. Eight high-fidelity ACT teams were assigned to provide IMR (ACT+IMR; four teams) or standard ACT services (ACT only; four teams). Clinical outcomes from101 individuals with schizophrenia-spectrum or bipolar disorders were assessed at baseline, six months, and one year. Results: Exposure to IMR (session attendance and module completion) varied between the ACT+IMR teams, with participants on one team having significantly less exposure. Results fromintent-to-treat analyses showed that participants in ACT+IMR demonstrated significantly better outcomes with a mediumeffect size at follow-up on clinician-rated illness selfmanagement. A nonsignificant,mediumeffect sizewas found for one measure of functioning, and small effect sizes were observed for client-rated illness self-management and community integration. Session and module completion predicted better outcomes on four of the 12-month outcome measures. Conclusions: Findings support the feasibility of implementing IMR within ACT teams. Although there were few significant findings, effect sizes on some variables in this small-scale study and the dose-response relationships within ACT+IMR teams suggest this novel approach could be promising for improving recovery for people with serious mental illness. Further largescale studies utilizing a hybrid effectiveness-implementation design could provide a promising direction in this area.

Publication Date

5-1-2018

Publication Title

Psychiatric Services

Volume

69

Issue

5

Number of Pages

562-571

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ps.201700124

Socpus ID

85046353273 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85046353273

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