Williamson Victoria, Larkin Michael, Reardon Tessa, Pearcey Samantha, Hill Claire, Stallard Paul, Spence Susan H, Breen Maria, Macdonald Ian, Ukoumunne Obioha, Ford Tamsin, Violato Mara, Sniehotta Falko, Stainer Jason, Gray Alastair, Brown Paul, Sancho Michelle, Creswell Cathy
Department of Experimental Psychology, Anna Watts Building, University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England
Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, England.
BMJ Open. 2021 Apr 20;11(4):e044852. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044852.
Anxiety difficulties are among the most common mental health problems in childhood. Despite this, few children access evidence-based interventions, and school may be an ideal setting to improve children's access to treatment. This article describes the design, methods and expected data collection of the Identifying Child Anxiety Through Schools - Identification to Intervention (iCATS i2i) study, which aims to develop acceptable school-based procedures to identify and support child anxiety difficulties. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: iCATS i2i will use a mixed-methods approach to codesign and deliver a set of procedures-or 'pathway'-to improve access to evidence-based intervention for child anxiety difficulties through primary schools in England. The study will consist of four stages, initially involving in-depth interviews with parents, children, school staff and stakeholders (stage 1) to inform the development of the pathway. The pathway will then be administered in two primary schools, including screening, feedback to parents and the offer of treatment where indicated (stage 2), with participating children, parents and school staff invited to provide feedback on their experience (stages 3 and 4). Data will be analysed using Template Analysis.
The iCATS i2i study was approved by the University of Oxford's Research Ethics Committee (REF R64620/RE001). It is expected that this codesign study will lead on to a future feasibility study and, if indicated, a randomised controlled trial. The findings will be disseminated in several ways, including via lay summary report, publication in academic journals and presentation at conferences. By providing information on child, parent, school staff and other stakeholder's experiences, we anticipate that the findings will inform the development of an acceptable evidence-based pathway for identification and intervention for children with anxiety difficulties in primary schools and may also inform broader approaches to screening for and treating youth mental health problems outside of clinics.
焦虑问题是儿童期最常见的心理健康问题之一。尽管如此,很少有儿童能获得循证干预措施,而学校可能是改善儿童获得治疗机会的理想场所。本文介绍了通过学校识别儿童焦虑——从识别到干预(iCATS i2i)研究的设计、方法和预期的数据收集情况,该研究旨在制定可接受的基于学校的程序,以识别和支持儿童焦虑问题。
iCATS i2i将采用混合方法进行共同设计,并提供一套程序或“路径”,以改善英格兰小学中儿童焦虑问题的循证干预措施的可及性。该研究将包括四个阶段,最初是对家长、儿童、学校工作人员和利益相关者进行深入访谈(第一阶段),以为路径的制定提供信息。然后,该路径将在两所小学实施,包括筛查、向家长反馈以及在有需要时提供治疗(第二阶段),参与的儿童、家长和学校工作人员将被邀请就他们的经历提供反馈(第三和第四阶段)。数据将使用模板分析法进行分析。
iCATS i2i研究已获得牛津大学研究伦理委员会的批准(参考编号R64620/RE001)。预计这项共同设计研究将促成未来的可行性研究,并在有必要时开展随机对照试验。研究结果将通过多种方式传播,包括通过通俗总结报告、在学术期刊上发表以及在会议上进行展示。通过提供有关儿童、家长、学校工作人员和其他利益相关者经历的信息,我们预计研究结果将为制定一套可接受的循证路径提供参考,用于小学中焦虑问题儿童的识别和干预,也可能为诊所之外筛查和治疗青少年心理健康问题的更广泛方法提供参考。