Skill Enactment Among University Students Using a Brief Video-Based Mental Health Intervention: Mixed Methods Study Within a Randomized Controlled Trial.

IF 4.8 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Jmir Mental Health Pub Date : 2024-08-21 DOI:10.2196/53794
Hayley M Jackson, Philip J Batterham, Alison L Calear, Jeneva L Ohan, Louise M Farrer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Mental health problems are common among university students, yet many students do not seek professional help. Digital mental health interventions can increase students' access to support and have been shown to be effective in preventing and treating mental health problems. However, little is known about the extent to which students implement therapeutic skills from these programs in everyday life (ie, skill enactment) or about the impact of skill enactment on outcomes.

Objective: This study aims to assess the effects of a low-intensity video-based intervention, Uni Virtual Clinic Lite (UVC-Lite), in improving skill enactment relative to an attention-control program (primary aim) and examine whether skill enactment influences symptoms of depression and anxiety (secondary aim). The study also qualitatively explored participants' experiences of, and motivations for, engaging with the therapeutic techniques.

Methods: We analyzed data from a randomized controlled trial testing the effectiveness of UVC-Lite for symptoms of depression and anxiety among university students with mild to moderate levels of psychological distress. Participants were recruited from universities across Australia and randomly assigned to 6 weeks of self-guided use of UVC-Lite (243/487, 49.9%) or an attention-control program (244/487, 50.1%). Quantitative data on skill enactment, depression, and anxiety were collected through baseline, postintervention, and 3- and 6-month follow-up surveys. Qualitative data were obtained from 29 intervention-group participants through open-ended questions during postintervention surveys (n=17, 59%) and semistructured interviews (n=12, 41%) after the intervention period concluded.

Results: Mixed model repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated that the intervention did not significantly improve skill enactment (F3,215.36=0.50; P=.68). Skill enactment was also not found to influence change in symptoms of depression (F3,241.10=1.69; P=.17) or anxiety (F3,233.71=1.11; P=.35). However, higher levels of skill enactment were associated with lower symptom levels among both intervention and control group participants across time points (depression: F1,541.87=134.61; P<.001; anxiety: F1,535.11=73.08; P<.001). Inductive content analysis confirmed low levels of skill enactment among intervention group participants. Participants were motivated to use techniques and skills that were perceived to be personally relevant, easily integrated into daily life, and that were novel or had worked for them in the past.

Conclusions: The intervention did not improve skill enactment or mental health among students with mild to moderate psychological distress. Low adherence impacted our ability to draw robust conclusions regarding the intervention's impact on outcomes. Factors influencing skill enactment differed across individuals, suggesting that it may be necessary to tailor therapeutic skills and engagement strategies to the individual user. Theoretically informed research involving collaboration with end users is needed to understand the processes underlying skill enactment in digital mental health interventions.

Trial registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12621000375853; https://tinyurl.com/7b9ar54r.

大学生使用简短视频心理健康干预的技能实施:随机对照试验中的混合方法研究
背景:心理健康问题在大学生中很常见,但许多学生并不寻求专业帮助。数字心理健康干预措施可以增加学生获得支持的机会,并已被证明能有效预防和治疗心理健康问题。然而,人们对学生在日常生活中实施这些程序中的治疗技能(即技能实施)的程度或技能实施对结果的影响知之甚少:本研究旨在评估基于视频的低强度干预--Uni Virtual Clinic Lite (UVC-Lite)--相对于注意力控制项目(主要目的)在提高技能实施方面的效果,并考察技能实施是否会影响抑郁和焦虑症状(次要目的)。本研究还对参与者参与治疗技术的经历和动机进行了定性探讨:我们分析了一项随机对照试验的数据,该试验测试了 "紫外线疗法 "对轻度至中度心理困扰的大学生抑郁和焦虑症状的疗效。参与者来自澳大利亚各所大学,被随机分配到为期 6 周的 "UVC-Lite "自我指导计划(243/487,49.9%)或注意力控制计划(244/487,50.1%)中。通过基线、干预后以及 3 个月和 6 个月的跟踪调查,收集了有关技能实施、抑郁和焦虑的定量数据。通过干预后调查中的开放式问题(17 人,占 59%)和干预结束后的半结构式访谈(12 人,占 41%),从 29 名干预组参与者处获得了定性数据:混合模型重复测量方差分析表明,干预并没有显著改善技能的形成(F3,215.36=0.50;P=.68)。此外,也未发现技能掌握会影响抑郁症状(F3,241.10=1.69;P=.17)或焦虑症状(F3,233.71=1.11;P=.35)的变化。然而,在各时间点上,干预组和对照组参与者中,较高水平的技能实施与较低的症状水平相关(抑郁:F1,541.87=134.61;P1,535.11=73.08;PC 结论:干预并未改善轻度至中度心理困扰学生的技能练习或心理健康。坚持率低影响了我们就干预对结果的影响得出可靠结论的能力。影响技能掌握的因素因人而异,这表明可能有必要根据使用者的具体情况调整治疗技能和参与策略。要想了解数字心理健康干预中技能形成的基本过程,需要与最终用户合作开展有理论依据的研究:澳大利亚-新西兰临床试验注册中心 ACTRN12621000375853; https://tinyurl.com/7b9ar54r.
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Jmir Mental Health
Jmir Mental Health Medicine-Psychiatry and Mental Health
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
3.80%
发文量
104
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: JMIR Mental Health (JMH, ISSN 2368-7959) is a PubMed-indexed, peer-reviewed sister journal of JMIR, the leading eHealth journal (Impact Factor 2016: 5.175). JMIR Mental Health focusses on digital health and Internet interventions, technologies and electronic innovations (software and hardware) for mental health, addictions, online counselling and behaviour change. This includes formative evaluation and system descriptions, theoretical papers, review papers, viewpoint/vision papers, and rigorous evaluations.
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