Centre for Women's Mental Health, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, The University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, UK.
Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2020 Nov;24(59):1-136. doi: 10.3310/hta24590.
Quality of life for children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness can be impaired, but evidence-based interventions to improve it are scarce.
Co-production of a child-centred intervention [called Young Simplifying Mental Illness plus Life Enhancement Skills (SMILES)] to improve the health-related quality of life of children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness, and evaluating its acceptability and feasibility for delivery in NHS and community settings.
Qualitative and co-production methods informed the development of the intervention (Phase I). A feasibility randomised controlled trial was designed to compare Young SMILES with treatment as usual (Phase II). Semistructured qualitative interviews were used to explore acceptability among children and adolescents living with their parents, who had serious mental illness, and their parents. A mixture of semistructured qualitative interviews and focus group research was used to examine feasibility among Young SMILES facilitators and referrers/non-referrers.
Randomisation was conducted after baseline measures were collected by the study co-ordinator, ensuring that the blinding of the statistician and research team was maintained to reduce detection bias.
Phase I: 14 children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness, seven parents and 31 practitioners from social, educational and health-related sectors. Phase II: 40 children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness, 33 parents, five referrers/non-referrers and 16 Young SMILES facilitators.
Young SMILES was delivered at two sites: (1) Warrington, supported by the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC), and (2) Newcastle, supported by the NHS and Barnardo's. An eight-session weekly group programme was delivered, with four to six children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness per age-appropriate group (6-11 and 12-16 years). At week 4, a five-session parallel weekly programme was offered to the parents/carers. Sessions lasted 2 hours each and focused on improving mental health literacy, child-parent communication and children's problem-solving skills.
Phase ll children and parents completed questionnaires at randomisation and then again at 4 and 6 months post randomisation. Quality of life was self-reported by children and proxy-reported by parents using the Paediatric Quality of Life questionnaire and KIDSCREEN. Semistructured interviews with parents ( = 14) and children ( = 17) who participated in the Young SMILES groups gathered information about their motivation to sign up to the study, their experiences of participating in the group sessions, and their perceived changes in themselves and their family members following intervention. Further interviews with individual referrers ( = 5) gathered information about challenges to recruitment and randomisation. Two focus groups ( = 16) with practitioners who facilitated the intervention explored their views of the format and content of the Young SMILES manual and their suggestions for changes.
A total of 35 families were recruited: 20 were randomly allocated to Young SMILES group and 15 to treatment as usual. Of those, 28 families [15/20 (75%) in the intervention group and 13/15 (87%) in the control group] gave follow-up data at the primary end point (4 months post baseline). Participating children had high adherence to the intervention and high completion rates of the questionnaires. Children and adolescents living with their parents, who had serious mental illness, and their parents were mainly very positive and enthusiastic about Young SMILES, both of whom invoked the benefits of peer support and insight into parental difficulties. Although facilitators regarded Young SMILES as a meaningful and distinctive intervention having great potential, referrers identified several barriers to referring families to the study. One harm was reported by a parent, which was dealt with by the research team and the NSPCC in accordance with the standard operating procedures.
The findings from our feasibility study are not sufficient to recommend a fully powered trial of Young SMILES in the near future. Although it was feasible to randomise children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness of different ages to standardised, time-limited groups in both NHS and non-NHS settings, an intervention like Young SMILES is unlikely to address underlying core components of the vulnerability that children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness express as a population over time.
Young SMILES was widely valued as unique in filling a recognised gap in need. Outcome measures in future studies of interventions for children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness are more likely to capture change in individual risk factors for reduced quality of life by considering their unmet need, rather than on an aggregate construct of health-related quality of life overall, which may not reflect these young people's needs.
A public health approach to intervention might be best. Most children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness remain well most of the time, so, although their absolute risks are low across outcomes (and most will remain resilient most of the time), consistent population estimates find their relative risk to be high compared with unexposed children. A public health approach to intervention needs to be both tailored to the particular needs of children and adolescents living with serious parental mental illness and agile to these needs so that it can respond to fluctuations over time.
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN36865046.
This project was funded by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in ; Vol. 24, No. 59. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年的生活质量可能会受到损害,但目前缺乏改善其生活质量的循证干预措施。
共同制定以儿童为中心的干预措施[称为青少年简化精神疾病和增强生活技能(SMILES)],以改善患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年的健康相关生活质量,并评估其在 NHS 和社区环境中实施的可接受性和可行性。
干预措施的开发(第一阶段)采用定性和共同制定方法。设计了一项可行性随机对照试验,将 Young SMILES 与常规治疗进行比较(第二阶段)。使用半结构化定性访谈,探讨了患有严重精神疾病的父母和他们的孩子对该干预措施的接受程度。使用半结构化定性访谈和焦点小组研究,调查了 Young SMILES 促进者和推荐者/非推荐者的可行性。
在研究协调员收集基线测量值后进行随机分组,以确保统计人员和研究团队的盲法得以维持,以减少检测偏差。
第一阶段:14 名患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年,7 名父母和 31 名来自社会、教育和卫生相关部门的从业人员。第二阶段:40 名患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年,33 名父母,5 名推荐者/非推荐者和 16 名 Young SMILES 促进者。
Young SMILES 在两个地点实施:(1)Warrington,由国家防止虐待儿童协会(NSPCC)支持;(2)Newcastle,由 NHS 和 Barnardo's 支持。每周进行八节小组课程,每个年龄组(6-11 岁和 12-16 岁)有四到六名患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年参加。在第 4 周,为父母/照顾者提供五节平行的每周课程。每个课程持续 2 小时,重点是提高心理健康素养、儿童与父母的沟通以及儿童解决问题的能力。
第二阶段的儿童和父母在随机分组时以及随机分组后 4 个月和 6 个月时完成了问卷调查。使用儿科生活质量问卷和 KIDSCREEN,儿童和父母分别自我报告生活质量。对参加 Young SMILES 小组的 14 名父母和 17 名儿童进行半结构化访谈,了解他们报名参加研究的动机、参加小组课程的体验,以及干预后他们自己和家庭成员的变化。对个别推荐者(n=5)进行进一步访谈,了解招募和随机分组的挑战。与 16 名促进者进行了两个焦点小组讨论,探讨了他们对 Young SMILES 手册格式和内容的看法,并提出了修改建议。
共招募了 35 个家庭:20 个被随机分配到 Young SMILES 组,15 个被分配到常规治疗组。其中,28 个家庭[干预组 15/20(75%),对照组 13/15(87%)]在主要终点(基线后 4 个月)时提供了随访数据。参加的儿童对干预措施有很高的依从性,问卷完成率很高。患有严重精神疾病的父母和他们的孩子对 Young SMILES 主要非常积极和热情,他们都提到了同伴支持的好处,以及对父母困难的洞察。尽管促进者认为 Young SMILES 是一种有意义和独特的干预措施,具有很大的潜力,但推荐者发现将家庭推荐给研究存在一些障碍。一名家长报告了一起伤害事件,该事件得到了研究团队和 NSPCC 根据标准操作程序的处理。
我们的可行性研究结果还不足以在不久的将来推荐对 Young SMILES 进行全面的试验。尽管在 NHS 和非 NHS 环境中,对不同年龄的患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年进行标准化、限时小组随机分组是可行的,但像 Young SMILES 这样的干预措施不太可能解决患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年随着时间的推移而表达的脆弱性的核心问题。
Young SMILES 被广泛认为是填补需求空白的独特方法。未来研究干预措施对患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年的影响,更有可能通过考虑他们未满足的需求来衡量个体降低生活质量的风险因素的变化,而不是通过整体的健康相关生活质量来衡量,因为这可能无法反映这些年轻人的需求。
公共卫生方法的干预可能是最好的。大多数患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年在大多数时候都很好,因此,尽管他们在所有结果上的绝对风险都较低(而且大多数人在大多数时候都保持坚韧),但与未暴露的儿童相比,他们的相对风险仍然很高。干预措施需要针对患有严重父母精神疾病的儿童和青少年的特殊需求,并具有灵活性,以便能够对时间的波动做出反应。
当前对照试验 ISRCTN36865046。
该项目由英国国家卫生研究所(NIHR)健康技术评估计划资助,将全文发表在 ; Vol. 24, No. 59. 请在 NIHR 期刊库网站上查看该项目的更多信息。