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Mind Power - A CBT Based Program for Adolescents

Primary Purpose

Mental Depression, Mental Stress, Mental Health Wellness 1

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Norway
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Mind Power Intervention
Sponsored by
Norwegian Institute of Public Health
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional prevention trial for Mental Depression focused on measuring youth mental health, mental health prevention, empowerment

Eligibility Criteria

15 Years - 17 Years (Child)All SexesAccepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 10 high Schools have implemented Mind Power in their ordinary scheduals. We include all the students in these school classes, all the classes that the school principals have desided can attend in the study. The Principals choose which classes that will attend in the study, due to the amount of teachers who are able to attend in the project, and due the fixed time scheduals in their ordinary school plan. Then we randomize which of these school classes that starts Mind Power first (Group 1) and which starts six months later (Group 2).

Exclusion Criteria:

  • none

Sites / Locations

  • Gry Anette Sælid

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm Type

Experimental

Experimental

Arm Label

Mind Power Intervention Group 1

Mind Power Intervention Group 2

Arm Description

Entire school classes will be randomly divided into two interventions (Mind Power Intervention Group 1 or Mind Power Intervention Group 2). The content in the two interventions are exactly the same, except the time when they are conducted. The first arm is the Mind Power Intervention Group 1. This intervention is the first and starts in September 2018 and last for 10 weeks.

The second arm is the Mind Power Intervention Group 2. This arm starts the intervention in January 2019 (six months later than Group 1). Group 2 function as a Control Group. The Experiment containes arm 1 and arm 2; With an delayed intervention design.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-Short form, 8 items)
Standardized and validated questionnaire: symptoms of anxiety and depression

Secondary Outcome Measures

Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES, short form, 4 items)
Standaardized and validated: Self-Esteem
Lindsley self-regulation (13 items)
Standardized and validated: Self-Regulation
The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS, 14 items)
Standardized and validated: Mental well-being scale
The Norwegian Version of the General Perceived Self-Efficacy Scale (short form, 5 items)
Standardized and validated: Self-Efficacy
Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale, 2nd Ed. Short Form (10 items)
Standardized and validated: Depression

Full Information

First Posted
July 17, 2018
Last Updated
March 22, 2023
Sponsor
Norwegian Institute of Public Health
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03647826
Brief Title
Mind Power - A CBT Based Program for Adolescents
Official Title
Mind Power - A CBT Based Program for Adolescents Aimed at Developing Coping Skills
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
March 2023
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
September 1, 2018 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
November 26, 2019 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
November 26, 2019 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Norwegian Institute of Public Health

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
No

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to strengthen school achievement and positive mental health, and to prevent and reduce school dropout and mental distress among high school students. The researchers will scale up techniques that have already been proven highly effective in preventing common mental disorders (depression, anxiety) in high risk groups (indicated and selective prevention). The researchers will disseminate these techniques to entire first year classes of high school students irrespective of risk factors (universal prevention). The study will report whether universal delivery in school of "Mind Power" - a Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) based programme - will strengthen school grades, self-efficacy, self-esteem, self-regulation, mental perceptions and well-being, and prevent and reduce school dropout, and symptoms of anxiety and depression. In addition the researchers will analyse whether such universal delivery prevents more mental distress, and is more cost-effective than when it is delivered only to those at high risk for school failure, dropout, or mental distress.
Detailed Description
Mind power (MTE) is a modification of the Coping With Depression (CWD) course (Lewinsohn, Weinstein, & Alper, 1970; Lewinsohn, Antonuccio, Steinmetz, & Teri, 1984). CWD is by far the most studied psycho-educational intervention (Cuijpers, Muños, Clark., & Lewinsohn, 2009). No other study has, however, tested these aims on a version of CWD. MTE is "The Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (ACDC)" (Børve, 2012). In Norwegian: "Depresjonsmesting for ungdom (DU)" and the newest version is "Mestringskurs for ungdom -DU". (The name "ACDC" has been changed to "MTE" in this project to capture the target group). In Norway, unlike physical health training (e.g. gymnastics), mental skills training (e.g. psychological techniques in CBT) is normally reserved for individuals in treatment or at risk for developing mental disorders. However, especially in Australia and USA, universal mental skills training programmes in schools have shown positive long-term effects (e.g. Harden et al., 2001; Wells, Barlow., & Stewart-Brown, 2003). The researchers will address how innovative research may contribute to the development of high quality education in Norway, and how to strengthen adolescents' resilience and empowerment in order to meet the challenges in society and work life. If the results in our project are positive, this project may have great impact on policy making in the areas of both education and public mental health. Background. Why promote mental health and prevent ill-health? Depression costs society more than any other illness (Helsedirektoratet, 2015) and is one of the greatest contributors to burden of disease in Norway (Folkehelseinstituttet, 2016). Twelve per cent of both boys and girls in Norway report that they experience symptoms of depression (NOVA, 2014). Up to 80% of adolescents with mental health problems do not receive any treatment (Essau; 2005; Zachrisson, Rödje & Mykletun, 2006). Individuals (especially boys) in need of help can be reluctant to contact the mental health system because of stigma associated with mental health problems (Gulliver, Griffiths & Christensen, 2010). Universally providing mental health skills in schools to enhancing young people's social and emotional skills may compensate for this. Dropouts from high School. Approximately 30% of adolescents in Norway do not complete high school. Approximately one third who drop out end up on disability benefit due to mental illness, mainly depression (Øverland, Glozier, Krokstad, & Mykletun, 2007; Sikveland, 2013). Internalizing problems (anxiety and depression) seems to affect dropout significantly (Melkevik et al., 2016). This has severe consequences for later work abilities, socioeconomic status and economic support (disability pensions) (Falch & Nyhus, 2011; Bergslie 2013). Because of the relationship between school motivation, mental health and academic achievements, it may be important to include all adolescents (Masten et al., 2005; Gustavsson et al., 2010). Reduce social differences. Adolescents with multicultural backgrounds seek less help from the mental health system (Guribye & Sam, 2008). Individuals without higher education receive less help from specialists (Jensen, 2009; Mykletun, Skogen, & Knudsen, 2010). These groups may benefit from mental health skills taught in high schools, independently of socio-economic background. If the MTE intervention works, fewer adolescents may dropout from school. Initiatives in Schools. Reviews of program evaluations show that interventions designed to promote young people's cognitive, behavioral, emotional and social development can successfully enhance skills associated with mental wellbeing (Browne, 2004; Keleher & Armstrong, 2005; Ball, 2010). There are several examples on mental skills training, such as the Friends programme, which has shown positive findings (Barrett, Farrell, Ollendick., & Dadds, 2006), along with the online CBT-programme MoodGym (Calear, Christensen, Mackinnon, Griffiths., & O'Kearney, 2009). However, most of the mental skills programs address adolescents with symptoms of anxiety and depression, or at risk of developing mental illnesses (e.g. Arnarson & Craighead, 2009). Several mental health progammes have been evaluated in Norwegian schools; e.g. "Alle har en psykisk helse", "Zippys venner", "Ungdom møter ungdom (STEP)", "Venn1.no" (Aune & Stiles, 2009; Andersson et al., 2009; Arnesen, Breivik, Johnsen; 2005; Mishara, Ystgaad, 2006). However, these programmes are aimed mainly at teaching children about general mental health, not at teaching mental health skills universally in the classroom. Why universal dissemination? Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (ACDC) has previously been tested on adolescents at risk for depression in a clinical setting, with positive effects (Garvik, Idsoe & Bru, 2013). However, as the prevention guru Geoffrey Rose stated: "If disease risk is widespread, measures that decrease risk for everyone are more effective in reducing the burden of disease than a 'high-risk' approach, in which measures are targeted only to those individuals with a substantially increased risk for disease." Because: "If disease rates rise continuously with higher levels of exposure to the risk factor, the larger number of people with a small elevation in risk will usually contribute more disease cases to the total burden of disease than the smaller number of people exposed to a high risk" (Rose, 2008). Rose's prevention paradigm has been proven valid on physical health by Mackenbach et al. (2012) and promising on mental health by Brugha et al. (2011). Neither CWD or ACDC have ever been tested on a non-clinical classroom sample aimed at health promotion. Because depression among young people is widespread, the researchers expect Rose's paradigm also to be valid on adolescent common mental disorder and disseminate MTE universally. Cognitive behaviour theory (CBT). "Mental Techniques in Every-day life (MTE)" is an adaption of the "Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (ACDC) " (Børve, 2012). ACDC has changed name to MTE to capture the target group. ACDC is mainly based on Cognitive Behavior Theory (CBT). The techniques that individuals are taught in CBT are acknowledged as one of the most efficient interventions for preventing and reducing depression (Clarke et al., 1995; Cuijpers et al., 2009). CBT delivered as group-therapy is effective in reducing major depression (Rohde et al., 2004; Rosselló, Bernal, & Rivera-Medina, 2012). The intention is to modify dysfunctional thinking and behaviour, since these aspects are regarded as one of the main causes of depression. A depressed individual is characterised as a person who has a negative internal dialog that maintains negative experiences and beliefs (Weersing, Rozenman, & Gonzalez, 2009). METHOD. Sample All first-year students in nine public high schools in the region of "Østfold fylkeskommune", and one school in "Akershus fylkeskommune" are implementing MTE in their ordinary school schedule. The principals for each school have choosen which classes that will attend in the study. The students in these classes are invited to attend the research project and respond to questionnaires. It is voluntary to respond. The target group is 16 and 17 years old students, irrespective of school achievements and internalizing problems. The sample consists of approximately 110 high school classes (2200 students). The classes will be randomly divided into two groups (see "Design"). Intervention. The program teaches students how to reflect about situations and their thinking-style, identify their own reaction-patterns to stressful events, to predict and influence their reactions, and to integrate this understanding and these skills into practice. Examples of themes are: how emotions emerge, how thoughts and actions influence feelings, how to change perspectives, coping techniques and how to do exercises in these methods. It combines interventions from Ellis and Grieger's (1977) Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT) and Beck, Rush, Shaw, and Emery's (1979) cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT). In addition, MTE has elements from meta-cognition (Wells et al., 2009), positive psychology (Seligman, 2006), social theories (Bandura, 1977), mindfulness and philosophy, and modern neurobiological perspectives. In the current project, only teachers will be course leaders and teach the students. In CWD and ACDC, course leaders have at least three years of relevant higher education; often nurses, or school-nurses, and psychologist. To be certified, the course leader in MTE, CWD and ACDC must complete a five-day intensive training program (36 hours). The organization "Fagakademiet" educates course leaders, and the training is held by a psychologist specialized in CBT. There are standardized course leader manuals and textbooks. In this project, approximately 170 teachers will be trained in MTE. The MTE course is once every week for 90 minutes across eight weeks, and have two booster sessions. After this project, the teachers will be continuing this work, because the school managements have decided to include MTE in the ordinary school plan. MTE is not treatment of mental illness. Research questions. The researchers hypotheses that participating in Mind power will increase self-efficacy (coping), self-esteem, self-control, quality of life and perceptions of their mental health, and reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression. The researchers want to test the effects of Mind power on school grades and drop-out. Separate analyses will be conducted on the whole intervention group vs. the control group and on the high-risk group versus the low risk group (HRG, LRG). The effects on all outcome measures will be examined after 1 year, and there will be conducted a cost-effectiveness-analysis. If more founding, the data collection will end in 2037 (the researchers have permission from The Norwegian National Research Ethics Committees). The four main hypotheses: Mind power enhances school grades, self-efficacy, self-control, self-esteem, mental well-being and mental health perceptions compared to the control group. Mind power prevents and reduces school dropout, and symptoms of depression and anxiety compared to the control group. More cases of prevented and reduced school dropout, and symptoms of depression and anxiety are found in the LRG group than in the HRL group. Gain from prevented dropouts and mental distress among LGR and HRG exceed the costs of Mind power. Design. The design is a longitudinal randomized controlled cluster trial, where entire classes will be randomly divided into two groups. The total sample will be measured when the first group starts Mind power. The first group starts Mind power immediately, and the second group starts Mind power after six months (in the next semester). The second group functions as a control group until beginning Mind power. This delayed intervention design will allow us to differentiate between a natural increase in the outcome variables and an increase caused by Mind power, in addition to comparing two Mind power interventions at follow up. The students respond on questionnaires before the session starts on the first course day, and at the end of the sessions on the last course day (day 8), when the other group attend the course, and follow-ups. The students click on a link on iPads or Laptops when responding on the questionnaires. The design makes us able to compare the two groups, and analyze the immediate effects of MTE and the long-term effect over at least 1 year (hopefully, there will be follow-ups until 15 years, if the project receive more founding), and to test Rose's proposition that a universal strategy is more effective than a high-risk strategy.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Mental Depression, Mental Stress, Mental Health Wellness 1
Keywords
youth mental health, mental health prevention, empowerment

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Prevention
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Sequential Assignment
Model Description
Mind Power Intervention Group 1 starts in the beginning of the school semester, and Mind Power Intervention Group 2 functions as a Control Group until it starts six months after Group 1.
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
1673 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Mind Power Intervention Group 1
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
Entire school classes will be randomly divided into two interventions (Mind Power Intervention Group 1 or Mind Power Intervention Group 2). The content in the two interventions are exactly the same, except the time when they are conducted. The first arm is the Mind Power Intervention Group 1. This intervention is the first and starts in September 2018 and last for 10 weeks.
Arm Title
Mind Power Intervention Group 2
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
The second arm is the Mind Power Intervention Group 2. This arm starts the intervention in January 2019 (six months later than Group 1). Group 2 function as a Control Group. The Experiment containes arm 1 and arm 2; With an delayed intervention design.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Mind Power Intervention
Intervention Description
The intervention has a total sample of 110 schoool classes, which are devided in two arms: Mind Power Intervention Group 1 or Mind Power Intervention Group 2
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-Short form, 8 items)
Description
Standardized and validated questionnaire: symptoms of anxiety and depression
Time Frame
2 minutes
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES, short form, 4 items)
Description
Standaardized and validated: Self-Esteem
Time Frame
1 minute
Title
Lindsley self-regulation (13 items)
Description
Standardized and validated: Self-Regulation
Time Frame
2 minutes
Title
The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS, 14 items)
Description
Standardized and validated: Mental well-being scale
Time Frame
2 minutes
Title
The Norwegian Version of the General Perceived Self-Efficacy Scale (short form, 5 items)
Description
Standardized and validated: Self-Efficacy
Time Frame
1 minute
Title
Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale, 2nd Ed. Short Form (10 items)
Description
Standardized and validated: Depression
Time Frame
1 minute
Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures:
Title
Students feedback on the experience of attending Mind Power
Description
Evaluation form: with questions regarding the young people's experience of the programme in their local context.
Time Frame
2 minutes
Title
The seven mental health rights
Description
24 questions rearding the students belifs about the meening of life
Time Frame
4 minutes

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
15 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
17 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: 10 high Schools have implemented Mind Power in their ordinary scheduals. We include all the students in these school classes, all the classes that the school principals have desided can attend in the study. The Principals choose which classes that will attend in the study, due to the amount of teachers who are able to attend in the project, and due the fixed time scheduals in their ordinary school plan. Then we randomize which of these school classes that starts Mind Power first (Group 1) and which starts six months later (Group 2). Exclusion Criteria: none
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Gry A Sælid, phd
Organizational Affiliation
Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Gry Anette Sælid
City
Oslo
ZIP/Postal Code
0403
Country
Norway

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
Undecided
IPD Sharing Plan Description
Services of sensitiv data (TSD) at the University of Oslo is providing this option.
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
35074007
Citation
Saelid GA, Czajkowski NO, Aaro LE, Andersen JR, Idsoe T, Helleseter MD, Holte A. Effects of a school-based intervention on levels of anxiety and depression: a cluster-randomized controlled trial of the MindPower program in ten high schools in Norway. BMC Psychol. 2022 Jan 24;10(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s40359-022-00721-y.
Results Reference
derived

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Mind Power - A CBT Based Program for Adolescents

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