Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University, Warren Alport Medical School, 345 Blackstone Blvd Providence, Providence, RI, 02906, USA.
RTI International, 701 13th St NW #750, Washington, DC, 20005, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Feb 3;24(1):362. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-17928-w.
Mental health disorders among youth contribute substantially to the global burden of disease, which is exacerbated in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) due to large mental health treatment gaps. In Sierra Leone, a West African country with a long history of complex adversity, the mental health treatment gap is estimated at 98%. Implementing innovative mental health interventions that can be sustained at scale is a priority. The Youth Readiness Intervention (YRI) is an evidence-based mental health intervention for youth that can be delivered feasibly by lay health workers/nonspecialists. Using mobile-based technologies to assist implementation could improve the reach and sustainability of the YRI in Sierra Leone. This study aims to train teachers to deliver the YRI in Sierra Leone's secondary schools and test the feasibility, acceptability, cost, and fidelity to the YRI of a mobile-based supervision model compared with standard, in-person supervision.
We will conduct a hybrid type 3 implementation-effectiveness cluster randomized trial to assess the feasibility, acceptability, costs and fidelity to the YRI implemented by teachers receiving mobile-based supervision vs. standard supervision. Enrolled schools (N = 50) will be randomized to YRI + mobile supervision (N = 20), YRI + standard supervision (N = 20) or waitlist control (N = 10). We will recruit and enroll four teachers per intervention-condition school (N = 160) and 1200 youth. We will collect data on implementation outcomes among teachers, principals and youth via a mixed methods approach at baseline and post-intervention. We will also collect quantitative data on youth mental health and functioning as secondary outcomes at baseline and post-intervention, as well as cost-effectiveness data at 12-month follow-up.
Study findings have the potential to expand the reach of mental health services among youth in low-resource settings via a teacher workforce. The use of mobile tools, if successful, could support further scale out and sustainment of the YRI to other regions of Sierra Leone and West Africa more broadly, which could help address the mental health treatment gap.
Clinical Trial Network: NCT05737667.
青少年的精神健康障碍在全球疾病负担中占很大比重,而在中低收入国家(LMICs),由于精神卫生治疗差距巨大,情况更为严重。塞拉利昂是一个西非国家,历史上经历了复杂的逆境,据估计,其精神卫生治疗差距为 98%。实施可以大规模持续的创新精神健康干预措施是当务之急。青年准备干预(YRI)是一种针对青年的循证精神健康干预措施,可由非专业的基层卫生工作者/非专家实施。利用移动技术来协助实施,可以提高 YRI 在塞拉利昂的覆盖范围和可持续性。本研究旨在培训教师在塞拉利昂的中学实施 YRI,并测试基于移动的监督模式与标准的面对面监督相比,对 YRI 的可行性、可接受性、成本和保真度。
我们将进行一项混合类型 3 的实施效果集群随机试验,以评估接受基于移动的监督的教师实施 YRI 的可行性、可接受性、成本和对 YRI 的保真度,与标准监督进行比较。被纳入的学校(N=50)将被随机分为 YRI+移动监督(N=20)、YRI+标准监督(N=20)或等待控制(N=10)。我们将招募并招募每个干预条件学校的四名教师(N=160)和 1200 名青年。我们将通过混合方法在基线和干预后收集教师、校长和青年的实施结果数据。我们还将在基线和干预后收集青年心理健康和功能的定量数据作为次要结果,并在 12 个月随访时收集成本效益数据。
研究结果有可能通过教师队伍扩大资源匮乏环境中青少年的精神健康服务覆盖范围。如果移动工具使用成功,可能会支持 YRI 在塞拉利昂和更广泛的西非其他地区的进一步推广和维持,这有助于解决精神卫生治疗差距问题。
临床试验网络:NCT05737667。