Plain-English translation of NCT04004364 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This is a learning health system study that follows people with first-episode psychosis (psychosis for the first time) who are receiving coordinated specialty care—a proven treatment approach that brings together psychiatry, therapy, case management, and family support in one place. The study collects information from five states to understand what works best and how to improve care for newly diagnosed patients.
Early psychosis is a critical time when the right treatment can change someone's long-term outcome. This study exists to gather real-world information from community clinics so doctors can learn what helps patients recover best and make treatment programs better for everyone.
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As a participant, you will continue receiving your coordinated specialty care treatment at your community mental health clinic as usual. The research team will collect information about your care, progress, and outcomes over time to help improve the program. This happens through your regular clinic visits and assessments—there are no extra visits or experimental treatments required beyond your normal care.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
United States
Collaborators
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Enrollment target
~700 participants
Started
April 2020
Primary completion
March 2025
This trial's estimated completion date has passed — the record may not be fully up to date.
Age range
15 Years – 40 Years
Last updated on clinicaltrials.gov in September 2024.
Reach out to the team running this trial. Response times vary — some teams are faster than others.
Central contact
Patricia Marcy, BSN
Northwell Health
Tell us you're interested and we'll help connect you with the research team. We'll walk you through what to expect first — no email needed to get started.