Gulliver Amelia, Griffiths Kathleen M, Christensen Helen, Mackinnon Andrew, Calear Alison L, Parsons Alison, Bennett Kylie, Batterham Philip J, Stanimirovic Rosanna
Centre for Mental Health Research, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
J Med Internet Res. 2012 Jun 29;14(3):e69. doi: 10.2196/jmir.1864.
Mental disorders are more common in young adults than at any other life stage. Despite this, young people have low rates of seeking professional help for mental health problems. Young elite athletes have less positive attitudes toward seeking help than nonathletes and thus may be particularly unlikely to seek help. Interventions aimed at increasing help-seeking in young elite athletes are warranted.
To test the feasibility and efficacy of three Internet-based interventions designed to increase mental health help-seeking attitudes, intentions, and behavior in young elite athletes compared with a control condition.
We conducted a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of three brief fully automated Internet-based mental health help-seeking interventions with 59 young elite athletes recruited online in a closed trial in Australia. The interventions consisted of a mental health literacy and destigmatization condition, a feedback condition providing symptom levels, and a minimal content condition comprising a list of help-seeking resources, compared with a control condition (no intervention). We measured help-seeking attitudes, intentions and behavior using self-assessed surveys. Participation was open to elite athletes regardless of their mental health status or risk of mental illness.
Of 120 athletes initially agreeing to participate, 59 (49%) submitted a preintervention or postintervention survey, or both, and were included in the present study. Adherence was satisfactory, with 48 (81%) participants visiting both weeks of assigned intervention material. None of the interventions yielded a significant increase in help-seeking attitudes, intentions, or behavior relative to control. However, at postintervention, there was a trend toward a greater increase in help-seeking behavior from formal sources for the mental health literacy/destigmatization condition compared with control (P = .06). This intervention was also associated with increased depression literacy (P = .003, P = .005) and anxiety literacy (P = .002, P = .001) relative to control at postintervention and 3-month follow-up, respectively, and a reduction in depression stigma relative to control at postintervention (P = .01, P = .12) and anxiety stigma at 3-month follow-up (P = .18, P = .02). The feedback and help-seeking list interventions did not improve depression or anxiety literacy or decrease stigmatizing attitudes to these conditions. However, the study findings should be treated with caution. Due to recruitment challenges, the achieved sample size fell significantly short of the target size and the study was underpowered. Accordingly, the results should be considered as providing preliminary pilot data only.
This is the first RCT of an Internet-based mental health help-seeking intervention for young elite athletes. The results suggest that brief mental health literacy and destigmatization improves knowledge and may decrease stigma but does not increase help-seeking. However, since the trial was underpowered, a larger trial is warranted.
2009/373 (www.clinicaltrials.gov ID: NCT00940732), cited at http://www.webcitation.org/5ymsRLy9r.
精神障碍在年轻人中比在其他任何生命阶段都更为常见。尽管如此,年轻人因心理健康问题寻求专业帮助的比例较低。年轻的精英运动员比非运动员对寻求帮助的态度更不积极,因此可能尤其不太可能寻求帮助。有必要采取干预措施来增加年轻精英运动员寻求帮助的行为。
与对照条件相比,测试三种基于互联网的干预措施在增加年轻精英运动员心理健康求助态度、意愿和行为方面的可行性和有效性。
我们对三种简短的、完全自动化的基于互联网的心理健康求助干预措施进行了随机对照试验(RCT),在澳大利亚的一项封闭试验中,从网上招募了59名年轻精英运动员。干预措施包括心理健康素养与消除污名化条件、提供症状水平的反馈条件以及包含求助资源列表的最低内容条件,与之相比的对照条件为(无干预)。我们使用自我评估调查来测量求助态度、意愿和行为。无论精英运动员的心理健康状况或患精神疾病的风险如何,均对其开放参与。
在最初同意参与的120名运动员中,59名(49%)提交了干预前或干预后调查,或两者都提交了,被纳入本研究。依从性令人满意,48名(81%)参与者访问了指定干预材料的两个星期。相对于对照,没有一种干预措施能使求助态度、意愿或行为显著增加。然而,在干预后,与对照相比,心理健康素养/消除污名化条件下从正规渠道寻求帮助行为的增加趋势更大(P = 0.06)。相对于对照,该干预措施在干预后和3个月随访时还分别与抑郁知识的增加(P = 0.003,P = 0.005)和焦虑知识的增加(P = 0.002,P = 0.001)相关,并且在干预后相对于对照抑郁污名减少(P = 0.01,P = 0.12),在3个月随访时焦虑污名减少(P = 0.18,P = 0.02)。反馈和求助列表干预措施并未改善抑郁或焦虑知识,也未减少对这些状况的污名化态度。然而,本研究结果应谨慎对待。由于招募方面的挑战,实际样本量显著低于目标样本量,该研究效能不足。因此,这些结果应仅视为提供了初步的试点数据。
这是第一项针对年轻精英运动员基于互联网的心理健康求助干预的随机对照试验。结果表明,简短的心理健康素养和消除污名化可提高知识水平并可能减少污名,但不会增加求助行为。然而,由于该试验效能不足,则有必要进行更大规模的试验。
2009/373(www.clinicaltrials.gov标识符:NCT00940732),引自http://www.webcitation.org/5ymsRLy9r。