Szkody Erica, Chang Ya-Wen, Schleider Jessica L
Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University.
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2023 Nov 6:1-14. doi: 10.1080/15374416.2023.2272935.
Rural teens are less likely to access care for depression than urban teens. Evidence-based digital single-session interventions (SSIs), offered via social media advertisements, may be well suited to narrowing this gap in treatment access and increasing access to support for adolescents living in rural areas. We evaluated the viability of using social media-based advertisements to equitably recruit adolescents living in rural areas with elevated depression symptoms to digital SSIs; we sought to characterize and assess whether SSI completion rates and acceptability differed for adolescents living in rural versus more urban areas, across three intervention conditions (two active, evidence-based SSIs; one placebo control); and we tested whether digital SSIs differentially reduced depressive symptoms.
We used pre-intervention and three-month follow up data from 13- to 16-year-old adolescents ( = 2,322; 88% female; 55% non-Hispanic White) within a web-based randomized control trial of three free, digital SSIs (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT04634903) collected eight months into the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.
Digital SSIs reached adolescents at population-congruent rates; however, social media ads resulted in relative underrepresentation of youths from rural areas who hold minoritized racial/ethnic identities. Adolescents living in rural areas also completed digital SSIs at similar rates to their urban peers, found SSIs equivalently as acceptable, and reported comparable depression symptom reductions as youth living in urban areas.
Digital SSIs and their dissemination through social media may offer a promising means of narrowing the gap between access to evidence-based mental health support between adolescents living in rural and urban areas; however, targeted efforts are warranted to reach racially minoritized youths in rural U.S. counties.
农村青少年比城市青少年获得抑郁症治疗的机会更少。通过社交媒体广告提供的循证数字单节干预措施(SSIs),可能非常适合缩小治疗机会方面的差距,并增加农村地区青少年获得支持的机会。我们评估了利用基于社交媒体的广告公平招募抑郁症症状加重的农村青少年参与数字SSIs的可行性;我们试图描述和评估在三种干预条件下(两种积极的、循证的SSIs;一种安慰剂对照),农村地区与城市地区的青少年在SSI完成率和可接受性方面是否存在差异;并且我们测试了数字SSIs是否能不同程度地减轻抑郁症状。
在美国新冠疫情爆发八个月后进行的一项基于网络的随机对照试验中,我们使用了13至16岁青少年(n = 2322;88%为女性;55%为非西班牙裔白人)干预前和三个月随访的数据,该试验提供三种免费的数字SSIs(ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT04634903)。
数字SSIs以与总体人口相符的比例覆盖青少年;然而,社交媒体广告导致来自农村地区、具有少数族裔种族/族裔身份的年轻人相对代表性不足。农村地区的青少年完成数字SSIs的比例与城市同龄人相似,认为SSIs同样可以接受,并且报告的抑郁症状减轻程度与城市地区的青少年相当。
数字SSIs及其通过社交媒体的传播可能为缩小农村和城市地区青少年在获得循证心理健康支持方面的差距提供一种有前景的手段;然而,需要有针对性的努力来覆盖美国农村县的少数族裔青年。