Rose-Clarke Kelly, Rimal Damodar, Morrison Joanna, Pradhan Indira, Hodsoll John, Jaoude Gerard Abou, Moore Brian, Banham Louise, Richards Justin, Jordans Mark, Prost Audrey, Lamichhane Nabin, Regmee Jaya, Gautam Kamal, Luitel Nagendra P
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, King's College London, 40 Aldwych, London, WC2B 4BG, UK.
Transcultural Psychosocial Organization Nepal, Baluwatar, , Kathmandu, Nepal.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2023 Aug 24;9(1):149. doi: 10.1186/s40814-023-01324-z.
Mental wellbeing encompasses life satisfaction, social connectedness, agency and resilience. In adolescence, mental wellbeing reduces sexual health risk behaviours, substance use and violence; improves educational outcomes; and protects mental health in adulthood. Mental health promotion seeks to improve mental wellbeing and can include activities to engage participants in sport. However, few high-quality trials of mental health promotion interventions have been conducted with adolescents, especially in low- and middle-income countries. We sought to address this gap by testing SMART (Sports-based Mental heAlth pRomotion for adolescenTs) in a pilot cluster-randomised controlled trial (cRCT) in Bardiya, Nepal.
The objectives of the trial are to assess the acceptability and feasibility of SMART, test trial procedures, explore outcome distributions in intervention and control clusters and calculate the total annual cost of the intervention and unit cost per adolescent. The trial design is a parallel-group, two-arm superiority pilot cRCT with a 1:1 allocation ratio and two cross-sectional census surveys with adolescents aged 12-19, one pre-intervention (baseline) and one post-intervention (endline). The study area is four communities of approximately 1000 population (166 adolescents per community). Each community represents one cluster. SMART comprises twice weekly football, martial arts and dance coaching, open to all adolescents in the community, led by local sports coaches who have received psychosocial training. Sports melas (festivals) and theatre performances will raise community awareness about SMART, mental health and the benefits of sport. Adolescents in control clusters will participate in sport as usual. In baseline and endline surveys, we will measure mental wellbeing, self-esteem, self-efficacy, emotion regulation, social support, depression, anxiety and functional impairment. Using observation checklists, unstructured observation and attendance registers from coaching sessions, and minutes of meetings between coaches and supervisors, we will assess intervention fidelity, exposure and reach. In focus group discussions and interviews with coaches, teachers, caregivers and adolescents, we will explore intervention acceptability and mechanisms of change. Intervention costs will be captured from monthly project accounts, timesheets and discussions with staff members.
Findings will identify elements of the intervention and trial procedures requiring revision prior to a full cRCT to evaluate the effectiveness of SMART.
ISRCTN, ISRCTN15973986 , registered on 6 September 2022; ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05394311 , registered 27 May 2022.
心理健康包括生活满意度、社会联系、能动性和恢复力。在青少年时期,心理健康可降低性健康风险行为、物质使用和暴力行为的发生率;改善教育成果;并在成年期保护心理健康。促进心理健康旨在改善心理状态,其中可能包括让参与者参与体育运动的活动。然而,针对青少年开展的高质量心理健康促进干预试验很少,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家。我们试图通过在尼泊尔巴迪亚进行的一项试点整群随机对照试验(cRCT)中测试SMART(青少年基于运动的心理健康促进项目)来填补这一空白。
该试验的目的是评估SMART的可接受性和可行性,测试试验程序,探索干预组和对照组的结果分布,并计算干预的年度总成本和每个青少年的单位成本。试验设计为平行组、双臂优势试点cRCT,分配比例为1:1,并对12至19岁的青少年进行两次横断面普查,一次在干预前(基线),一次在干预后(终线)。研究区域为四个社区,每个社区约有1000人(每个社区166名青少年)。每个社区代表一个整群。SMART包括每周两次的足球、武术和舞蹈教练指导,对社区内所有青少年开放,由接受过社会心理培训的当地体育教练带领。体育盛会(节日)和戏剧表演将提高社区对SMART、心理健康和体育运动益处的认识。对照组的青少年将照常参加体育运动。在基线和终线调查中,我们将测量心理健康、自尊、自我效能感、情绪调节、社会支持、抑郁、焦虑和功能损害。我们将使用观察清单、非结构化观察和教练课程的出勤记录,以及教练与监督员之间的会议记录,来评估干预的保真度、参与度和覆盖范围。在焦点小组讨论以及与教练、教师、照顾者和青少年的访谈中,我们将探索干预的可接受性和改变机制。干预成本将从每月的项目账目、考勤表以及与工作人员的讨论中获取。
研究结果将确定在全面的cRCT之前需要修订的干预措施和试验程序的要素,以评估SMART的有效性。
ISRCTN,ISRCTN15973986,于2022年9月6日注册;ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT05394311,于2022年5月27日注册。