对教师进行课堂管理培训以改善小学生的心理健康:STARS集群RCT

T. Ford, R. Hayes, S. Byford, Vanessa Edwards, Malcolm Fletcher, S. Logan, B. Norwich, Will Pritchard, K. Allen, Matt Allwood, Poushali Ganguli, Katie Grimes, Lorraine Hansford, Bryony Longdon, S. Norman, A. Price, A. Russell, O. Ukoumunne
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引用次数: 11

摘要

儿童时期的心理健康状况不佳是常见的、持续的,并与一系列不良后果有关,包括持续的精神病理学、冒险行为、犯罪和教育失败,所有这些也可能损害健康。政策越来越关注儿童的心理健康,尤其是学校在解决这一问题方面的作用。评估不可思议的岁月®(IY)教师课堂管理(TCM)培训是否改善了儿童的心理健康、行为、教育程度和上学乐趣,改善了教师的心理健康和与工作的关系,并且在潜在的改进方面具有成本效益。一项双臂、务实、平行组、优越性、集群随机对照试验。2012年至2014年间,共有80所英国学校(集群)被招募到三个不同的队列中,并被随机分配到中医(干预)或照常教学[(TAU)对照],在9个月、18个月和30个月进行随访。学校和教师没有被分配。80所学校(n = 2075名儿童):40名(n = 1037名儿童)和40名(n = 1038名儿童)到TAU。中医药分六个全天课程提供给教师,时间跨度为6个月。中医的明确目标是提高课堂管理技能和改善师生关系。主要计划结果是教师报告的优势和困难问卷总困难(SDQ-TD)得分。使用广义估计方程的随机效应线性回归和边际逻辑回归模型来分析结果。干预降低了9个月时的SDQ-TD评分[调整平均差(AMD)-1.0,95%置信区间(CI)-1.9至-0.1;p = 0.03],但在18个月时几乎没有证据表明有影响(AMD–0.1,95%CI–1.5至1.2;p = 0.85)和30个月(AMD–0.7,95%CI–1.9至0.4;p = 0.23)。有计划的亚组分析表明,对于心理健康不佳的儿童,中医药比TAU更有效。使用SDQ-TD的成本效益分析表明,与TAU相比,TCM具有成本效益的概率与一些不确定性有关(范围为40%至80%,取决于SDQ-TD评分中为单位改进付费的意愿)。就质量调整生命年(QALYs)而言,有证据表明,与美国国家健康与护理卓越研究所的TAU相比,中医药具有成本效益,在9个月和18个月的随访中,每个QALY的阈值为20000–30000英镑,但在30个月的访问中没有。有证据表明破坏行为减少(p = 0.04)以及注意力不集中和过度活动的减少(p = 0.02)。尽管对受教育程度没有主要影响,但亚组分析表明,干预措施对识字率和心理健康状况不佳的人的影响不同(互动 = 0.04)和算术(互动p = 0.03)。来自教师的独立盲观察和定性反馈表明,教师在课堂上的行为因参加中医培训而发生了变化。教师没有被分配,并且根据家长报告的数据对自然减员进行了标记。我们的研究结果提供了初步证据,证明中医药在短期内可能是一种有效的普遍儿童心理健康干预措施,特别是对那些被认为有困难的小学生来说,而且在短期内它可能是一个具有成本效益的干预措施。进一步的研究应该通过培训所有学校工作人员来探索中医药作为一种整体方法,并应该以更彻底和系统的方式评估中医药对学术进步的影响。目前的对照试验ISRCTN84130388。该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究计划资助,并将在《公共卫生研究》上全文发表;第7卷第6期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。美国国立卫生研究院西南半岛应用健康研究和护理领导力合作组织(NIHR CLAHRC西南半岛)也提供了资金。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Training teachers in classroom management to improve mental health in primary school children: the STARS cluster RCT
Poor mental health in childhood is common, persistent and associated with a range of adverse outcomes that include persistent psychopathology, as well as risk-taking behaviour, criminality and educational failure, all of which may also compromise health. There is a growing policy focus on children’s mental health and the role of schools in particular in addressing this.To evaluate whether or not the Incredible Years®(IY) Teacher Classroom Management (TCM) training improved children’s mental health, behaviour, educational attainment and enjoyment of school, improved teachers’ mental health and relationship with work, and was cost-effective in relation to potential improvements.A two-arm, pragmatic, parallel-group, superiority, cluster randomised controlled trial.A total of 80 UK schools (clusters) were recruited in three distinct cohorts between 2012 and 2014 and randomised to TCM (intervention) or teaching as usual [(TAU) control] with follow-ups at 9, 18 and 30 months. Schools and teachers were not masked to allocation.Eighty schools (n = 2075 children) were randomised: 40 (n = 1037 children) to TCM and 40 (n = 1038 children) to TAU.TCM was delivered to teachers in six whole-day sessions, spread over 6 months. The explicit goals of TCM are to enhance classroom management skills and improve teacher–student relationships.The primary planned outcome was the teacher-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire Total Difficulties (SDQ-TD) score. Random-effects linear regression and marginal logistic regression models using generalized estimating equations were used to analyse outcomes.The intervention reduced the SDQ-TD score at 9 months [adjusted mean difference (AMD) –1.0, 95% confidence interval (CI) –1.9 to –0.1;p = 0.03] but there was little evidence of effects at 18 months (AMD –0.1, 95% CI –1.5 to 1.2;p = 0.85) and 30 months (AMD –0.7, 95% CI –1.9 to 0.4;p = 0.23). Planned subgroup analyses suggested that TCM is more effective than TAU for children with poor mental health. Cost-effectiveness analysis using the SDQ-TD suggested that the probability of TCM being cost-effective compared with TAU was associated with some uncertainty (range of 40% to 80% depending on the willingness to pay for a unit improvement in SDQ-TD score). In terms of quality-adjusted life-years (QALYs), there was evidence to suggest that TCM was cost-effective compared with TAU at the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence thresholds of £20,000–30,000 per QALY at 9- and 18-month follow-up, but not at 30-month follow-up. There was evidence of reduced disruptive behaviour (p = 0.04) and reductions in inattention and overactivity (p = 0.02) at the 30-month follow-up. Despite no main effect on educational attainment, subgroup analysis indicated that the intervention’s effect differed between those who did and those who did not have poor mental health for both literacy (interactionp = 0.04) and numeracy (interactionp = 0.03). Independent blind observations and qualitative feedback from teachers suggested that teachers’ behaviour in the classroom changed as a result of attending TCM training.Teachers were not masked to allocation and attrition was marked for parent-reported data.Our findings provide tentative evidence that TCM may be an effective universal child mental health intervention in the short term, particularly for primary school children who are identified as struggling, and it may be a cost-effective intervention in the short term.Further research should explore TCM as a whole-school approach by training all school staff and should evaluate the impact of TCM on academic progress in a more thorough and systematic manner.Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN84130388.This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full inPublic Health Research; Vol. 7, No. 6. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. Funding was also provided by the NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care South West Peninsula (NIHR CLAHRC South West Peninsula).
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