Refining the Universal, School-Based OurFutures Mental Health Program to Be Trauma Informed, Gender and Sexuality Diversity Affirmative, and Adherent to Proportionate Universalism: Mixed Methods Participatory Design Process.

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Lucinda Grummitt, Sasha Bailey, Erin V Kelly, Louise Birrell, Lauren A Gardner, Jillian Halladay, Cath Chapman, Jack L Andrews, Katrina E Champion, Emily Hunter, Lyra Egan, Chloe Conroy, Raaya Tiko, An Nguyen, Maree Teesson, Nicola C Newton, Emma L Barrett
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Mental disorders are the leading cause of disease burden among youth. Effective prevention of mental disorders during adolescence is a critical public health strategy to reduce both individual and societal harms. Schools are an important setting for prevention; however, existing universal school-based mental health interventions have shown null, and occasionally iatrogenic, effects in preventing symptoms of common disorders, such as depression and anxiety.

Objective: This study aims to report the adaptation process of an established, universal, school-based prevention program for depression and anxiety, OurFutures Mental Health. Using a 4-stage process; triangulating quantitative, qualitative, and evidence syntheses; and centering the voices of young people, the revised program is trauma-informed; lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, nonbinary, queer, questioning, and otherwise gender and sexuality diverse (LGBTQA+) affirmative; relevant to contemporary youth; and designed to tailor intervention dosage to those who need it most (proportionate universalism).

Methods: Program adaptation occurred from April 2022 to July 2023 and involved 4 stages. Stage 1 comprised mixed methods analysis of student evaluation data (n=762; mean age 13.5, SD 0.62 y), collected immediately after delivering the OurFutures Mental Health program in a previous trial. Stage 2 consisted of 3 focus groups with high school students (n=39); regular meetings with a purpose-built, 8-member LGBTQA+ youth advisory committee; and 2 individual semistructured, in-depth interviews with LGBTQA+ young people via Zoom (Zoom Video Communications) or WhatsApp (Meta) text message. Stage 3 involved a clinical psychologist providing an in-depth review of all program materials with the view of enhancing readability, improving utility, and normalizing emotions while retaining key cognitive behavioral therapy elements. Finally, stage 4 involved fortnightly consultations among researchers and clinicians on the intervention adaptation, drawing on the latest evidence from existing literature in school-based prevention interventions, trauma-informed practice, and adolescent mental health.

Results: Drawing on feedback from youth, clinical psychologists, and expert youth mental health researchers, sourced from stages 1 to 4, a series of adaptations were made to the storylines, characters, and delivery of therapeutic content contained in the weekly manualized program content, classroom activities, and weekly student and teacher lesson summaries.

Conclusions: The updated OurFutures Mental Health program is a trauma-informed, LBGTQA+ affirmative program aligned with the principles of proportionate universalism. The program adaptation responds to recent mixed findings on universal school-based mental health prevention programs, which include null, small beneficial, and small iatrogenic effects. The efficacy of the refined OurFutures Mental Health program is currently being tested through a cluster randomized controlled trial with up to 1400 students in 14 schools across Australia. It is hoped that the refined program will advance the current stalemate in universal school-based prevention of common mental disorders and ultimately improve the mental health and well-being of young people in schools.

完善以学校为基础的 "我们的未来 "心理健康普及计划,使其具有创伤信息、性别和性取向多样性平权,并坚持比例普及主义:混合方法参与式设计过程。
背景:精神障碍是造成青少年疾病负担的主要原因。在青少年时期有效预防精神障碍是减少个人和社会危害的一项重要公共卫生策略。学校是进行预防的重要场所;然而,现有的以学校为基础的普遍心理健康干预措施在预防抑郁症和焦虑症等常见精神障碍症状方面显示出的效果是无效的,有时甚至是先天性的:本研究旨在报告一项成熟、普遍、以学校为基础的抑郁和焦虑症预防计划 "我们的未来心理健康 "的适应过程。修订后的计划采用了 4 个阶段的流程;对定量、定性和证据综合进行了三角测量;并以年轻人的声音为中心,以创伤为导向;对男女同性恋、双性恋、变性人、非二元性别者、同性恋者、质疑者以及其他性别和性取向多元化者(LGBTQA+)给予肯定;与当代年轻人息息相关;旨在为最需要的人量身定制干预剂量(按比例的普遍性):计划调整从 2022 年 4 月开始,至 2023 年 7 月结束,共分为 4 个阶段。第 1 阶段包括对学生评估数据(n=762;平均年龄 13.5 岁,标准差 0.62 岁)进行混合方法分析,这些数据是在之前的试验中实施 "我们的未来 "心理健康计划后立即收集的。第 2 阶段包括与高中生(人数=39)进行 3 次焦点小组讨论;与专门成立的 8 人 LGBTQA+ 青年咨询委员会举行定期会议;以及通过 Zoom(Zoom 视频通讯)或 WhatsApp(Meta)短信与 LGBTQA+ 青年进行 2 次半结构化的个人深度访谈。第 3 阶段由一名临床心理学家对所有项目材料进行深入审查,以增强可读性、提高实用性、使情绪正常化,同时保留认知行为疗法的关键要素。最后,在第四阶段,研究人员和临床医生每两周就干预措施的调整进行一次磋商,并从现有文献中汲取有关校本预防干预措施、创伤知情实践和青少年心理健康的最新证据:根据青少年、临床心理学家和青少年心理健康研究专家在第 1 至第 4 阶段提供的反馈意见,对故事情节、人物以及每周手册化计划内容、课堂活动和每周学生与教师课程总结中的治疗内容进行了一系列调整:更新后的 "我们的未来 "心理健康计划是一项以创伤为基础的 LBGTQA+ 平权计划,符合适度普遍性原则。该计划的改编回应了最近关于基于学校的心理健康预防计划的混合研究结果,其中包括无效效应、微小的有益效应和微小的先天性效应。目前,我们正在通过分组随机对照试验,对改进后的 "我们的未来 "心理健康计划的有效性进行测试,测试对象是澳大利亚 14 所学校的 1400 名学生。我们希望改进后的计划能打破目前以学校为基础普遍预防常见精神障碍的僵局,并最终改善在校青少年的心理健康和福祉。
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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
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