Body Image Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Randomised Control Trial to Examine the Acceptability, Feasibility, and Efficacy of 'Confident Me' School Workshops for Body Confidence in India
Body image is one of the leading concerns for young people. Such concerns can have serious
health consequences, including unhealthy weight control and exercise behaviours, depression
and self-harm, low self-esteem and substance abuse. Emerging approaches for improving body
image are effective among adolescent girls and boys in the school setting. However, the vast
majority of trials in this area are conducted in high-income westernised countries, despite
body image concerns increasingly being recognised as a global concern. As such, it is
important to develop and disseminate interventions to promote positive body image among
adolescents in in low-to-middle income countries, too. 'Confident Me' has been found to be
effective in improving body image and related outcomes among adolescent girls and boys in the
UK up to 12-months later, and thus, could undergo adaptations for the Indian context.
The aim of the present study is two-fold:
- To conduct a small-scale acceptability study of a 'Confident Me', a body image
intervention, among 11-13-year olds in New Delhi, India, to understand its
acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy in a metropolitan area of India.
- To refine 'Confident Me' based on the acceptability study, and to conduct a randomised
controlled trial to evaluate its efficacy at improving body image and related outcomes
among 11-13-year olds in New Delhi, India.
The first aim will be fulfilled by recruiting two schools, of which one will be randomised to
the intervention and the other to the control arm. We will compare the body image and
well-being of students who take part in the programme to students in the control group. The
investigators will also gather in-depth feedback from students, teachers and the
interventionist via focus groups and interviews, in order to inform future improvement of the
programme. The second aim will be fulfilled by randomising six schools to either the revised
body image programme (3 schools) or the control arm (3 schools). Students will complete
questionnaire assessments of body image and well-being before and after the 5-week programme
period, and again 12 weeks later to assess longer-term benefits.
Background:
Body image is a significant and prevalent concern for adolescents in high-income countries
such as the UK, the USA, and Australia. For example, a study of 1,600 girls in the UK found
that four in ten 11-16-year-old girls are unhappy with the way they look. Similarly, a
nationally representative survey of nearly 22,000 young people in Australia found that 3 in
10 adolescent boys and girls are very concerned about their body image, and body image was
voted among the top three life concerns. The high prevalence of body image concerns among
adolescent boys and girls is worrisome, given their serious negative physical and
psychological health consequences. For example, body dissatisfaction is associated with
engagement in unhealthy weight loss behaviours and the onset of eating disorders, depression
and self-harm, substance use, and lower levels of academic engagement.
There is increasing recognition that body image is a global issue, as opposed to one
relegated to privileged adolescents in high-income Westernised countries. For example, in
India, 57% of adolescents aged 15-19 years report being concerned with their appearance.
Further, adolescent girls across different regions of India have expressed concerns in
relation to their weight and report dieting behaviours. Skin colour has also been indicated
as an additional source of appearance concern among young people in India. A large-scale
study among Asian, African, and South American countries, found that 19% of Indian
undergraduate students had used a skin lightening product in the previous 12 months, strongly
suggesting dissatisfaction with their natural skin tone, which may be pertinent to younger
groups.
Collectively, these findings indicate the importance of developing and disseminating
interventions to promote positive body image among adolescents in India. To date, only one
published study has investigated the effectiveness of a body image intervention delivered in
schools to adolescents in India. The results indicated the potential for media literacy to
improve body satisfaction among adolescent girls. While this study offers a promising first
step, more research is needed to understand the potential for school body image interventions
in India.
The aim of the present study is two-fold:
1. To conduct a small-scale acceptability study of a body image intervention among
11-13-year olds in New Delhi, India, to understand its acceptability, feasibility, and
preliminary efficacy in a metropolitan area of India.
2. To refine the body image intervention based on the acceptability study, and to conduct a
randomised controlled trial to evaluate its efficacy at improving body image and related
outcomes among 11-13-year olds in New Delhi, India.
1) The Acceptability Study
Design:
Two schools will be randomly allocated to receive the body image intervention or
classes-as-usual (control). Students will be assessed on body image and related outcomes at
baseline, post-intervention and 10 weeks follow-up, under standardised conditions.
Participants & recruitment:
Two co-educational secondary schools in Delhi, India, will be invited to take part in this
study. The collaborators in India will recruit the schools, and they will likely be schools
with which their institution has existing relations with. All students in classes 6-7
(equivalent of UK years 7-8; students aged 11-13) in each school will be invited to take
part.
After expressing initial interest, each school will receive detailed information regarding
the aims, objective and requirements of the study to help them decide if they would like to
take part in this research project. In line with the ethical procedures adopted at the
collaborators' Indian universities, the school's head teacher will provide active informed
consent. Students will also be required to provide their consent before taking part. All
students will have the opportunity to opt out of the study, or withdraw from the study at any
time, irrespective of head teacher consent. The Indian ethical procedures do not involve
asking parents to provide consent for their child's participation in the research.
The exact numbers of students that take part in this research will depend on the number of
children enrolled in classes 6-7 at each school recruited, and the number that opt out during
the student consent process or are lost at follow-up due to moving schools, or being away
from school on the day the data is collected. However, given that this is a preliminary
acceptability study, both conditions (i.e., schools) will include 80 girls and 80 boys (160
participants overall) aged 11 to 13 years, which allows for 30% attrition.
Intervention:
Dove Confident Me
Dove Confident Me is a school-based intervention co-created by researchers at La Trobe
University (Australia), the Centre for Appearance Research UWE, teachers, students, and
education experts, and the Dove Self-Esteem Project (the social mission for personal care
brand Dove). The five-session intervention is aimed at adolescents aged between 11-13 years,
and targets recognised risk factors for body dissatisfaction, by addressing societal
appearance ideals (Session 1), media literacy (Session 2), appearance comparisons (Session
3), appearance-related conversations and teasing (Session 4), and promoting 'body activism'
(Session 5). The intervention consists of classroom-based discussion and small group
activities and uses audio-visual materials and worksheets to facilitate learning. The content
is based upon an evidence-based intervention previously trialled among adolescent girls
(Richardson and Paxton, 2010).
A large-scale cluster randomised controlled trial (RCT) evaluating Dove Confident Me found it
to be effective in improving body image and related outcomes among adolescent girls and boys
in the UK up to 12-months later when delivered by teachers (Diedrichs et al., under review).
These findings present the longest improvements in body image observed in a teacher-led
intervention. However, the intervention has not undergone evaluation in low- and middle-
income countries, such as India, where body image concerns are also prevalent but the
rigorous development, evaluation, and dissemination, of evidence-based interventions is
lacking.
Procedure:
Investigators from the Centre for Appearance Research (CAR) based at the University of the
West of England will be leading the study remotely from Bristol, UK. CAR researchers will be
responsible for designing the study, analysing the data, and writing up the manuscript. They
will also be working with Indian collaborators who will be responsible for translating the
measures, recruiting the schools, collecting data, and delivering the intervention.
Students aged 11-13 from a further two secondary schools in Delhi will be recruited, and
independent randomisation will be used to assign one school to the intervention condition,
and the other to the lessons-as-usual control condition. This will be done using freely
available computer software. Dove Confident Me (culturally adapted and translated into
Hinglish) will be delivered by counselling psychologists at Karma Centre for Wellbeing in
Delhi. The interventionists will be trained (in person) by two researchers from CAR on the
delivery of the intervention. Both of these researchers possess experience of delivering, and
training others to deliver, a range of body image interventions, including Dove Confident Me.
A questionnaire comprising the self-report measures described below will be used to assess
the impact of the intervention on students' body image and associated risk factors. After
obtaining consent from the school head teachers, and the students, these measures will be
administered in the classroom to the 11-13 year old students at pre-intervention (1-2 weeks
before intervention delivery), immediately after intervention delivery (within 1 week of the
final session), and again at 10 weeks follow-up. The questionnaire will take students no more
than 20-25 minutes to complete. Students will complete questionnaires under standardised
conditions supervised by their teachers and trained research staff. Blinding of students,
teachers, and researchers is not possible due to the nature of the intervention. However,
risk of bias from teachers and researchers is minimised due to anonymous self-report
assessments. Risk of contagion is also minimised by randomising at the school level.
Participating schools will receive a £150 honorarium. This project has received ethical
approval from the University of the West of England's Faculty Research Ethics Committee.
In order to assess the fidelity of the intervention manuals, all sessions will be
audio-recorded as well as observed by a researcher and rated based on adherence to lesson
plans. The interventionist and observing teachers also will be asked to complete a brief form
after each lesson stating which activities were completed.
To assess intervention feasibility and acceptability, phone calls will be conducted with the
interventionists after every session, to collect 'in-the-moment' feedback and suggestions for
improvement to the materials. At the conclusion of the intervention, interviews will be
conducted with the interventionists to explore their experience of delivering the body image
lessons. They will also be asked how well the content of the intervention was received, how
comfortable they felt delivering the session, and their suggestions to improve the
intervention further. Class teachers observing the lessons will also be interviewed and asked
similar questions.
In the post-intervention questionnaire, students will be asked a series of questions to
assess their acceptability of the intervention. Students will indicate agreement with
different statements using a 5-point Likert scale, and will be asked three open-ended
questions: what they liked, what they did not like, and to list three things they learnt from
the intervention. Additionally, a sub-sample of students (approximately 10 girls, 10 boys) in
the intervention condition will also be invited to take part in single-gender focus groups,
in order to explore their opinions of the intervention. Permission to audio record the focus
groups and interviews will be sought from participants prior to commencing the discussions.
The findings from this study will then be used to refine the intervention material further,
to ensure that it is adequately localised to the Indian context.
2) The Randomised Controlled Trial
Design:
Six schools will be randomly allocated to receive the body image intervention or
classes-as-usual (control). Students will be assessed on body image and related outcomes at
baseline, post-intervention and 12 weeks follow-up, under standardised conditions.
Participants & recruitment:
Six co-educational secondary schools in Delhi, India, will be invited to take part in this
study. The collaborators in India will recruit the schools, and they will likely be schools
with which their institution has existing relations with. All students in classes 6-8
(equivalent of UK years 7-9; students aged 11-14) in each school will be invited to take
part.
After expressing initial interest, each school will receive detailed information regarding
the aims, objective and requirements of the study to help them decide if they would like to
take part in this research project. In line with the ethical procedures adopted at the
collaborators' Indian universities, the school's head teacher will provide active informed
consent. Students will also be required to provide their consent before taking part. All
students will have the opportunity to opt out of the study, or withdraw from the study at any
time, irrespective of head teacher consent. The Indian ethical procedures do not involve
asking parents to provide consent for their child's participation in the research.
The exact numbers of students that take part in this research will depend on the number of
children enrolled in classes 6-8 at each school recruited, and the number that opt out during
the student consent process or are lost at follow-up due to moving schools, or being away
from school on the day the data is collected. However, we will endeavour to include 125 girls
and 125 boys (250 participants overall) aged 11 to 14 years, which allows for 30% attrition.
Procedure:
Students aged 11-14 from a further six secondary schools in Delhi will be recruited, and
independent randomisation will be used to assign three schools to the intervention condition,
and the other three to the lessons-as-usual control condition. This will be done using freely
available computer software. The refined programme will be delivered by counselling
psychologists at Karma Centre for Wellbeing in Delhi. The interventionists will be trained
(in person) by two researchers from CAR on the delivery of the intervention. Both of these
researchers possess experience of delivering, and training others to deliver, a range of body
image interventions, including Dove Confident Me.
A questionnaire comprising the self-report measures described below will be used to assess
the impact of the intervention on students' body image and associated risk factors. After
obtaining consent from the school head teachers, and the students, these measures will be
administered in the classroom to the 11-14 year old students at pre-intervention (1-2 weeks
before intervention delivery), immediately after intervention delivery (within 1 week of the
final session), and again at 12 weeks follow-up. The questionnaire will take students no more
than 20-25 minutes to complete. Students will complete questionnaires under standardised
conditions supervised by their teachers and trained research staff. Blinding of students,
teachers, and researchers is not possible due to the nature of the intervention. However,
risk of bias from teachers and researchers is minimised due to anonymous self-report
assessments. Risk of contagion is also minimised by randomising at the school level.
Participating schools will receive a £150 honorarium. This project has received ethical
approval from the University of the West of England's Faculty Research Ethics Committee.
In order to assess the fidelity of the intervention manuals, all sessions will be
audio-recorded as well as observed by a researcher and rated based on adherence to lesson
plans. The interventionist and observing teachers also will be asked to complete a brief form
after each lesson stating which activities were completed.
To assess intervention feasibility and acceptability, interviews will be conducted with the
interventionists at the end of the programme to explore their experience of delivering the
body image lessons.
In the post-intervention questionnaire, students will be asked a series of questions to
assess their acceptability of the intervention. Students will indicate agreement with
different statements using a 5-point Likert scale, and will be asked three open-ended
questions: what they liked, what they did not like, and to list three things they learnt from
the intervention.
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