Effectiveness of Interventions to Improve Resiliency & Burnout in Behavioral Health Residential Staff

NAEnrolling by invitationINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

900

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

March 1, 2023

Primary Completion Date

February 28, 2028

Study Completion Date

February 28, 2028

Conditions
BurnoutStressCoping SkillsDepressionAnxietyPhysical InactivitySleepHealthy Eating
Interventions
BEHAVIORAL

Resiliency Training

"The Stress Management and Resiliency Training: Relaxation Response Resiliency Program (SMART-3RP) has been shown to be effective in improving resilience and reducing distress among individuals across different populations and settings. The SMART-3RP enhances resilience by 1) teaching tools to elicit the relaxation response (RR) to offset negative effects of chronic stress; 2) improving stress management and awareness; and 3) promoting growth enhancement and agency to effect positive change. It blends stress coping principles from mind-body, cognitive-behavioral, and positive psychology theory to teach skills to advance each of these resiliency processes. The training will be delivered in six 50-minute virtual group sessions with 2 optional booster sessions available for those who desire additional sessions to further consolidate the core resiliency skills."

BEHAVIORAL

Task Sharing

"Task Sharing is a process involving health care workers in partnership with others in which workers retain many of their primary tasks, but some tasks are completed collaboratively or by other workers or volunteers in a shared effort. Study coaches will work with the group home directors and RCWs to identify shared tasks that may be conducted by peers or resident volunteers by task co-assignment with supervision and support. Task co-assignments will be discussed in routine house meetings occurring on a weekly basis and incorporated into a jointly developed house plan. The house plan will engage staff and residents to identify shared activities to reduce the burden on RCWs through task co-assignment and team-based efforts aimed at tasks that create unnecessary burden and stress for RCWs, yet do not require RCWs to complete them."

BEHAVIORAL

Workplace Improvement Learning Collaborative

The Workplace Improvement Learning Collaborative (WILC) consists of identifying major sources of RCW burnout across the system and then instituting an organizational (agency-wide) measure to address the identified sources of burnout by restructuring tasks (e.g., reducing administrative burdens, increasing workflow efficiencies) through a virtual earning collaborative with group home leaders. Learning collaboratives commonly use a structured framework within which teams learn about research and best practices, apply quality-improvement methods, and exchange their experiences in making improvements with the widespread use of such collaboratives. Program Directors will participate in a learning collaborative facilitated by trained and certified study coaches to identify and collaboratively develop and implement effective strategies to address root causes of RCW burnout across group homes and program directors assigned to the WILC intervention.

Trial Locations (1)

02114

Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute

OTHER

collaborator

Vinfen

INDUSTRY

collaborator

Bay Cove Human Services

OTHER

lead

Massachusetts General Hospital

OTHER