With this SBIR application, the New England Research Institutes (NERI) aims to develop a highly innovative clinician training and support product that is based upon a landmark, empirically-supported Oxford University Press therapist guide and workbook for compulsive hoarding. Compulsive hoarding is a prevalent and potentially devastating disorder which is under-recognized and inadequately managed by most clinicians. The disorder is associated severe personal impairment and with high societal costs from lost work productivity, mental health service utilization, non-psychiatric medical costs, and demands on over-burdened housing authorities, visiting nurse agencies, and public health workers. A readily-available training and support product is in very high demand by mental health providers who are frustrated by the ineffectiveness of current treatments available and who feel ill-equipped to treat clients who hoard. NERI will develop the web-based training product in collaboration with the researchers and authors of the compulsive hoarding manual (G. Steketee, R. Frost). An innovative plan is proposed to systematically evaluate the impact on clinician's knowledge, practice skills, and fidelity to the method, as well. Phase II will incorporate web-based methods to assist the clinician in adhering to this evidence-based practice. A web format is particularly appropriate as it can be constantly updated as new research on effective treatment methods is completed and diffusion of new technology provides other tools for monitor clinician adherence to the training approach. This SBIR program addresses directly an NIMH's priority to use """"""""information technologies and the internet in health services and intervention delivery"""""""". This product will advance the state of practice in five major, innovative ways: (1) It addresses an urgent, but universally under-recognized mental health problem (compulsive hoarding) that practitioners are wholly unprepared to treat. (2) The manual-based treatment approach which provides the program's foundation is unique and path-breaking. (3) The evaluation design and active ingredients of the web instructional program are unparalleled in mental health training. (4) The investigator team is uniquely multi-disciplinary and qualified, combining the best of academe, clinical practice, research, and commercial knowledge. (5) NERI has a unique blend of strong empirical research resources and commitment to advancing evidence-based clinical practice. Thus, this product strives to provide the cutting edge in evidence-based mental health training, monitoring of fidelity, and the evaluation of training. NERI will recruit in Phase I 60 mental health clinicians from diverse practice settings to a randomized controlled trial (delayed-intervention) to evaluate the feasibility of the web-based program, relative to the therapist guide alone, and to pilot test the elements of the Phase II effectiveness evaluation, with measures o these key outcomes: a) knowledge gain; b) skill acquisition and adherence; c) engagement in and satisfaction with the learning experience; d) attitude change; and, e) intent to treat more clients with compulsive hoarding problems.

Public Health Relevance

The overall AIM for this SBIR is to develop, implement and evaluate an innovative program for mental health clinicians that trains in and supports continued use of an empirically-supported treatment for compulsive hoarding using specialized cognitive and behavioral interventions. The full SBIR program will increase clinical awareness of how to recognize and diagnose compulsive hoarding, translate the only evidence-based therapist manual that exists into a highly accessible and engaging web-based format, and create an innovative way to measure and increase clinician adherence to recommended practices. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase I (R43)
Project #
1R43MH083336-01
Application #
7478224
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-BBBP-P (11))
Program Officer
Haim, Adam
Project Start
2008-07-01
Project End
2009-09-30
Budget Start
2008-07-01
Budget End
2009-09-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$98,869
Indirect Cost
Name
New England Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
153914080
City
Watertown
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02472