Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05763719 |
Other study ID # |
IRB00368124 |
Secondary ID |
5R01MH128913-02 |
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 15, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
February 2, 2026 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2024 |
Source |
Johns Hopkins University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The study combined a youth-friendly economic empowerment program (Rabbits for Resilience
(RFR) with a gender equality couple curriculum program (HIKA) to advance knowledge on the
combined and synergistic impact of structural interventions and pathways with families for
improved adolescent mental health in resource-poor communities. The investigators'
multidisciplinary team will conduct a randomized controlled trial with three arms (RFR only,
HIKA only, RFR + HIKA) with young adolescents ages 10-14 years and the adolescents' mothers
and fathers living in 1080 rural households in 30 villages in two rural conflict-affected
territories of South Kivu province of Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
Description:
In the South Kivu province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the setting for the
study, families have experienced more than two decades of conflict and trauma, displacement
and political instability resulting in extreme poverty with limited educational and economic
opportunities. Child poverty and exposure to trauma is widespread and particularly
concentrated in conflict-affected and hard-to-reach rural areas. According to UNICEF, 80% of
DRC children have experienced at least two major deprivations (e.g., absences of food,
housing, water, and medical care) in the children's lifetime. Childhood exposure to multiple
adversities can lead to a lifetime of poor mental health. In the investigators' previous work
in rural DRC, the investigators found parent's self-report of poor mental health and
victimization or perpetration of intimate partner violence (IPV) had a significant negative
impact on the parents' young adolescents' mental health and functioning, with different
impacts for boys and girls. Specifically, mother's experience of IPV and symptoms of PTSD and
depression had a stronger negative effect on adolescent girls in the household than on
adolescent boys, including experienced stigma, externalizing behaviors, and school
attendance. The underlying ideologies of male authority and of girls' and women's place being
in the home has led to gender norms that restrict women and girl's mobility and
opportunities. The impact of inequitable social norms on young adolescent mental health has
had limited attention. Bolstering young peoples' mental health in the context of compounding
childhood adversities and inequitable norms requires investments in families using locally
designed and led multi-level interventions. The investigators' study will combine and examine
the synergistic effect of two evidence-based interventions targeting young adolescents and
the adolescents' mothers and fathers. Rabbits for Resilience (RFR) is a signature economic
empowerment and mentorship program by the investigators' partner Congolese led
non-governmental organization (NGO), Promotion de la Famille Paysanne (PFP). Young
adolescents in RFR (with parent agreement) receive two rabbits and repay this asset loan with
2 offspring; these offspring are then provided as new assets to other youth in the same
village, thus a sustainable program that also strengthens peer and family relationships.
Adolescents and the adolescents' parents are mentored by RFR to continue to breed rabbits
after repayment to sell or use to meet basic household needs (e.g. school fees, food),
respond to economic shocks (e.g. illness) or opportunities (buy a goat). The investigators'
randomized controlled trial demonstrated that adolescents in families active in RFR had
improved mental health, enhanced food security and better school attendance.12 Harmful norms
and behaviors, including a "husband's right to use violence to discipline his wife" have
sustained inequalities and in the investigators' work influences who benefits most (boys or
girls) from the RFR intervention. Therefore, RFR will be combined with HIKA meaning "to
arrive". HIKA is an adapted 22 week group based, gender-equality curriculum delivered to
couples/parents by trained local leaders. The HIKA program strengthens family relations
through knowledge and skills building in communication, power sharing, parenting, and
conflict management. Couples participating in the program in Rwanda reported less physical
and/or sexual violence victimization and perpetration over a 24-month period. Additional
benefits included reductions in acceptability of wife beating, conflict with partner,
corporal punishment, depression and improved communication, self-efficacy and self-rated
health. Combining a youth-friendly economic empowerment program with a gender equality
program with parents of these young adolescents will advance knowledge on the combined and
synergistic impact of structural interventions and pathways for improved adolescent mental
health. The investigators' multidisciplinary team will conduct a clustered randomized
controlled trial with three arms (RFR only, HIKA only, RFR + HIKA) with young adolescents
ages 10-14 years and the adolescents' parents living in 1080 rural households in 30 villages
in two rural conflict-affected territories of South Kivu province of Eastern DRC.
1. Examine the combined and synergetic effect of RFR and HIKA on young adolescent mental
health. Hypothesis 1. Adolescents in RFR + HIKA households will report greater
improvement in mental health compared to adolescents in RFR only and HIKA only
households in rural conflict affected villages.
2. Examine the pathways through which RFR and HIKA improves adolescent mental health.
- Hypothesis 2a. Adolescents in the RFR + HIKA and RFR households will report greater
improvement in mental health via pathway of improved self-efficacy, school
attendance, food security and peer relationships compared to adolescents in HIKA
only households in rural conflict-affected villages.
- Hypothesis 2b. Adolescents in RFR + HIKA and HIKA only households will report
greater improvement in mental health via the pathway of improved parental (mother
and father) relationship quality and power sharing, reduced exposure to
IPV/corporal punishment, improved parental mental health and support of gender
equitable norms compared to adolescents in RFR only households in rural conflict
affected villages.
3. Examine if the pathways by which RFR and HIKA improve adolescent mental health differ by
sex.