Mughal Faraz, Chew-Graham Carolyn A, Saunders Benjamin, Lawton Sarah A, Lewis Sarah, Smith Jo, Lancaster Gillian, Townsend Ellen, Armitage Christopher J, Bower Peter, Kapur Nav, Kessler David, Realpe Alba X, Wiles Nicola, Ougrin Dennis, Lewis Martyn
School of Medicine, Keele University, Keele, England, UK.
School of Psychology, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, England, UK.
NIHR Open Res. 2024 Oct 15;4:27. doi: 10.3310/nihropenres.13576.2. eCollection 2024.
Self-harm in young people is a growing concern and reducing rates a global priority. Rates of self-harm documented in general practice have been increasing for young people in the UK in the last two decades, especially in 13-16-year-olds. General practitioners (GPs) can intervene early after self-harm but there are no effective treatments presently available. We developed the GP-led COPING intervention, in partnership with young people with lived experience and GPs, to be delivered to young people 16-25 years across two consultations. This study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of conducting a fully powered effectiveness trial of the COPING intervention in NHS general practice.
This will be a mixed-methods external non-randomised before-after single arm feasibility study in NHS general practices in the West Midlands, England. Patients aged 16-25 years who have self-harmed in the last 12 months will be eligible to receive COPING. Feasibility outcomes will be recruitment rates, intervention delivery, retention rates, and completion of follow-up outcome measures. All participants will receive COPING with a target sample of 31 with final follow-up data collection at six months from baseline. Clinical data such as self-harm repetition will be collected. A nested qualitative study and national survey of GPs will explore COPING acceptability, deliverability, implementation, and likelihood of contamination.
Brief GP-led interventions for young people after self-harm are needed to address national guideline and policy recommendations. This study of the COPING intervention will assess whether a main trial is feasible.
ISRCTN (ISRCTN16572400; 28.11.2023).
年轻人的自我伤害问题日益受到关注,降低其发生率是全球的优先事项。在过去二十年中,英国普通医疗中记录的年轻人自我伤害发生率一直在上升,尤其是在13至16岁的青少年中。全科医生(GP)可以在自我伤害事件发生后尽早进行干预,但目前尚无有效的治疗方法。我们与有实际经历的年轻人和全科医生合作,开发了由全科医生主导的应对干预措施,分两次咨询为16至25岁的年轻人提供。本研究旨在检验在国民保健服务(NHS)全科医疗中对应对干预措施进行全面效能试验的可行性和可接受性。
这将是一项在英格兰西米德兰兹郡的NHS全科医疗中进行的混合方法外部非随机前后单组可行性研究。在过去12个月内有过自我伤害行为的16至25岁患者将有资格接受应对干预。可行性结果将包括招募率、干预实施情况、留存率以及随访结果测量的完成情况。所有参与者都将接受应对干预,目标样本为31人,从基线开始在六个月时收集最终随访数据。将收集诸如自我伤害重复情况等临床数据。一项嵌套的定性研究以及针对全科医生的全国性调查将探讨应对干预的可接受性、可实施性、实施情况以及污染可能性。
需要针对年轻人自我伤害后进行简短的全科医生主导干预,以落实国家指南和政策建议。这项关于应对干预的研究将评估主要试验是否可行。
国际标准随机对照试验编号(ISRCTN16572400;2023年11月28日)