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针对13至17岁青少年抑郁症的精力充沛活动:READY可行性随机对照试验

Energetic activity for depression in young people aged 13-17 years: the READY feasibility RCT.

作者信息

Smith Megan, James Ryan, Howlett Neil, Mengoni Silvana, Jones Julia, Sims Erika, Turner David, Grant Kelly, Clark Allan, Murdoch Jamie, Bottoms Lindsay, Wilson Jonathan, Sharma Shivani, Chater Angel, Guillard Cecile, Clarke Timothy, Jones Andy, David Lee, Wyatt Solange, Rourke Claire, Wellsted David, Trivedi Daksha

机构信息

Centre for Health Services and Clinical Research, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK.

Department of Psychology, Sport and Geography, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2024 Dec 18:1-26. doi: 10.3310/KWNH4507.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Prevalence of depression is increasing in young people. Behaviour change interventions providing benefits equal to or greater than talking therapies or pharmacological alternatives are needed. Exercise could be beneficial for young people with depression, but we lack robust trials of its effectiveness.

OBJECTIVE

To test whether an exercise intervention targeting young people with depression is feasible, including recruitment and retention of young people, recruitment and training of exercise professionals and intervention delivery.

DESIGN

Three-arm cluster feasibility randomised controlled trial with embedded process evaluation and health economic data collection.

SETTING

Local community venues in Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Norfolk.

PARTICIPANTS

Young people aged 13-17 years experiencing mild to moderate low mood or depression (indicated by scoring 17-36 on the Child Depression Inventory version 2) identified by mental health services, schools or self-referral.

INTERVENTIONS

Participants were randomised to one of three groups: high-intensity exercise, low-intensity exercise or a social activity control. Group sessions ran twice-weekly for 12 weeks delivered by registered exercise professionals, supported by mental health support workers.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

Referral, recruitment and retention rates; attendance at group sessions; adherence to and ability to reach intensity during exercise sessions; proportions of missing data, and adverse events measured at baseline and at 3 and 6 months; resource use; and reach and representativeness.

RESULTS

Of 321 referrals to the study, 173 were assessed for eligibility, and of the target sample size of 81, 15 were recruited and 14 were randomised (one withdrew). The retention rate was 71.4% and attendance at intervention sessions was > 67%; data completeness was > 80% for baseline assessments. Follow-up completion rate at 14 weeks was > 80% for most outcomes, with 50% for accelerometer data in the low-intensity group. Trial processes and the intervention were acceptable to young people. Barriers to and facilitators of intervention delivery were identified.

LIMITATIONS

Findings highlighted challenges around recruitment, delivery of exercise interventions and informed ways of addressing barriers to recruitment for future studies. The study was conducted between October 2020 and August 2022 and consequently the COVID-19 pandemic had a disruptive impact on implementation.

CONCLUSIONS

A large randomised trial of the effectiveness of the intervention is not feasible using the current study design, but issues relating to recruitment could be addressed with further work.

FUTURE WORK

Developing appropriate recruitment strategies via triage services, general practitioner practices, schools and social media and early engagement with the local Clinical Research Network to support recruitment to the study would address the significant shortfalls identified. Young people who are deemed unsuitable for mental health services should be followed up to be offered participation in such interventions. Collaborations between the NHS services and sports delivery partners should consider in-person contact with young people rather than remote consultations. Recruiting through general practitioner practices is effective and relatively inexpensive. The role of community engagement (socialmedia, public health agencies, community groups) needs to be further explored. Strong public and patient involvement and engagement via young people advisory groups is important to ensure that research is relevant to young people.

FUNDING

This article presents independent research funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme as award number 17/78/10.

摘要

背景

年轻人中抑郁症的患病率正在上升。需要行为改变干预措施,其效果要等同于或优于谈话疗法或药物治疗。运动可能对患有抑郁症的年轻人有益,但我们缺乏关于其有效性的有力试验。

目的

测试针对患有抑郁症的年轻人的运动干预是否可行,包括年轻人的招募与留存、运动专业人员的招募与培训以及干预的实施。

设计

三臂整群可行性随机对照试验,嵌入过程评估和健康经济数据收集。

地点

赫特福德郡、贝德福德郡和诺福克郡的当地社区场所。

参与者

年龄在13至17岁之间,经历轻度至中度情绪低落或抑郁症(儿童抑郁量表第二版得分17 - 36分表明)的年轻人,由心理健康服务机构、学校识别或自我推荐而来。

干预措施

参与者被随机分为三组之一:高强度运动组、低强度运动组或社交活动对照组。小组课程由注册运动专业人员每周进行两次,为期12周,并由心理健康支持人员提供支持。

主要结局指标

转诊、招募和留存率;小组课程的出勤率;运动课程期间达到强度的依从性和能力;缺失数据的比例,以及在基线、3个月和6个月时测量的不良事件;资源使用情况;以及覆盖范围和代表性。

结果

在321例转诊至该研究的病例中,173例接受了资格评估,在目标样本量81例中,15例被招募,14例被随机分组(1例退出)。留存率为71.4%,干预课程的出勤率>67%;基线评估的数据完整性>80%。大多数结局在14周时的随访完成率>80%,低强度组加速度计数据的完成率为50%。年轻人认为试验过程和干预措施是可以接受的。确定了干预实施的障碍和促进因素。

局限性

研究结果凸显了在招募、运动干预的实施以及为未来研究解决招募障碍的明智方法方面存在的挑战。该研究于2020年10月至2022年8月期间进行,因此新冠疫情对实施产生了干扰性影响。

结论

使用当前的研究设计对该干预措施的有效性进行大型随机试验是不可行的,但与招募相关的问题可以通过进一步的工作来解决。

未来工作

通过分诊服务、全科医生诊所、学校和社交媒体制定适当的招募策略,并尽早与当地临床研究网络合作以支持该研究的招募工作,将解决所发现的重大不足。应跟进那些被认为不适合心理健康服务的年轻人,为他们提供参与此类干预的机会。国民保健服务机构与体育服务合作伙伴之间的合作应考虑与年轻人进行面对面接触而非远程咨询。通过全科医生诊所进行招募是有效的且相对成本较低。社区参与(社交媒体、公共卫生机构、社区团体)的作用需要进一步探索。通过年轻人咨询小组进行强有力的公众和患者参与对确保研究与年轻人相关很重要。

资金来源

本文介绍了由英国国家健康与照护研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估计划资助的独立研究,资助编号为17/78/10。

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