About EDIPPP

About EDIPPP Happy GroupThe Early Detection and Intervention for the Prevention of Psychosis Program (EDIPPP) was a research and treatment initiative focused on gathering the evidence needed to better meet the mental health needs of adolescents and young adults at risk for severe mental illness. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded EDIPPP from 2007 to 2013 in six site locations: Portland, ME; Sacramento, CA; Salem, OR and four nearby counties; Ann Arbor, MI; Queens, NY; and Albuquerque, NM.  Each site’s program was based on the Portland Identification and Early Referral (PIER) model, which was developed in 2001 at the Maine Medical Center by Dr. William McFarlane and his multidisciplinary team. By using a combination of evidence-based pharmacologic and psychosocial interventions, EDIPPP sites treated the early warning signs of severe mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder with psychosis, and major depression with psychosis) in people ages 12 to 25 as part of a rigorous research program. 

The main components of the program included:

  • Community outreach, focused on educating individuals who interact regularly with young people and may be in a position to observe prodromal symptoms. These include school employees, social workers, doctors, nurses, students, parents, clergy, and law enforcement personnel.
     
  • Research in which a specialized multidisciplinary clinical team assessed referred individuals’ risk for psychosis and functioning level, assigned them to one of three study groups based on their symptoms (lower risk, higher risk, or early in their first episode of psychosis), and tracked their progress.
     
  • Clinical treatment geared towards the needs of young adults (between the ages of 12 and 25) at risk for a psychotic episode. The clinical program included in-depth assessment; multifamily group therapy; individual therapy; supported employment and education; and medication, as needed.

In essence, EDIPPP identified and treated young people experiencing prodromal (early) indicators that heightened their risk of developing severe mental illness.

Summary of Outcomes

The objective of EDIPPP was to test effectiveness in preventing the onset of psychosis and improving functioning in a sample of at-risk youth from a nationally representative group of cities and counties.  The study thus had two major goals: (a) to create systems across six entire communities that could identify and refer youth either just before or just after they experienced first full psychosis; and (b) to test a comprehensive treatment approach to determine if there were large clinical and functional effects of very early intervention. 

The study compared two treatment options for 337 young people between the ages of 12-25 who were at risk of psychosis. The promising results show how a package of pre-emptive, evidence-based services can prevent young people exhibiting the earliest signs and symptoms of a psychotic disorder from converting to full-blown psychosis. The conversion rate to psychosis among those who received intervention through EDIPPP with strong family involvement averaged 6.3 percent—well below the 29 percent conversion among at-risk individuals who get infrequent or no treatment in the community. EDIPPP helped families learn to engage and support someone with severe mental illness, and helped patients succeed in school and at work. A significant number of people in the study (83-90 percent) who received the broad EDIPPP interventions were able to maintain or increase participation in work or school, increasing productivity.

It also found that systems of early identification and preventive intervention could be established in nationally representative cities and counties, and that the results there matched or surpassed those observed in 11 other international clinical trials and in the original American site, Portland, ME.

Additional information and materials related to the EDIPPP demonstration also appear under the various other sections of the NASMHPD Early Interventions in Psychosis (EIP) website. Click hereto learn more about the published research outcomes for EDIPPP and the PIER program.

Below are videos, case studies, and participant stories that exemplify the positive impact that the EDIPPP demonstration has had on the lives of young people and their families.

2009 PIER 7 minute video2009 PIER 15 minute video Reclaiming Potential Finding the Real Katie Cynthia Wilcox

Additional Information

Additional information and materials related to the EDIPPP demonstration also appear under the various other sections of the NASMHPD Early Interventions in Psychosis (EIP) website. Click hereto learn more about the published research outcomes for EDIPPP and the PIER program.

Resources