Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development, Piloting and Evaluation of a Phone-Delivered Psychological Intervention (t-CETA) for Syrian Refugee Children in Lebanon: Phase II
This study evaluates the effectiveness of t-CETA, a version of Common Elements Treatment
Approach (CETA) adapted to be delivered over the telephone, in treating common mental health
problems in 8-17 year old Syrian refugee children living in Lebanon. Children will be
randomly assigned to receive either t-CETA or treatment as usual provided by Médecins du
Monde, an NGO providing medical and mental health services to Syrian refugees in Lebanon. If
families do not agree to randomisation, they will be offered t-CETA and their data will be
used to evaluate implementation and acceptability of the intervention.
Symptoms of common mental health problems, including anxiety, depression, PTSD, and
behavioural problems, and psychological well-being, will be measured before treatment,
immediately after treatment, and three months after treatment is completed. Groups will be
compared to determine if t-CETA is at least as effective as standard treatment provided by
Médecins du Monde.
Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA) is a transdiagnostic treatment approach designed to
treat common mental health problems such as anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD), and externalising behaviour problems. It uses a Cognitive Behavioural
Therapy (CBT) approach and has been used in both adults and children. There are a number of
different components that can be put together to provide a treatment approach that is
tailored to each individual. For this study CETA has been adapted to be delivered over the
telephone (t-CETA).
The overall study has two specific objectives:
1. Development of telephone-delivered CETA (t-CETA) by adapting the scientifically
validated face-to face CETA programme (including manual and detailed training material).
This was completed during Phase I.
2. Scientific evaluation of the effectiveness of t-CETA applying a randomized controlled
clinical trial. This will be completed during Phase II and is described in the remainder
of this submission.
Study design:
The implementation and efficacy of t-CETA will be tested with a randomized controlled
clinical trial. Up to 120 Syrian refugee children will be randomly allocated to either t-CETA
or treatment as usual provided by Médecins du Monde in primary healthcare centres in the
Beqaa valley. Clinical interviews with children and primary caregivers will be conducted
before the intervention to determine suitability for inclusion. Assessments will be carried
out before and after the intervention as well as during a 3-month follow-up assessment by
independent trained enumerators blind to study condition. If families do not agree to
randomisation, they will be offered t-CETA only and their data will be used to carry out
additional evaluation of efficacy, implementation and acceptability of the intervention.
Implementation and acceptance of the intervention will be further assessed with a qualitative
study based on interviews with a subset of involved Syrian refugee children, their caregivers
as well as mental health staff.
Sample:
Children included in the study will be selected from the large sample of an NICHD funded
study on the biological pathways of risk and resilience in Syrian refugee children based in
Lebanon headed by PI Prof. Michael Pluess and co-PI Prof. Elie Karam ("Biological Pathways of
Risk and Resilience in Syrian Refugee Children" [BIOPATH]; Sponsor: Queen Mary University of
London [ReDA Ref: 011120]; Ethical approval: Institutional Review Board of the University of
Balamand, Lebanon [Ref: IRB/O/024-16/1815] and Ministry of Public Health in Lebanon, in
consultation with the Lebanese National Consultative Committee on Ethics). BIOPATH is a
longitudinal study and includes 1,600 Syrian refugee families in the Beqaa valley. For each
of these children there is data on a range of psychological outcomes (PTSD, depression,
anxiety, externalising behavioural problems). From the 1,600 children, the investigators will
select up to 120 based on psychological symptoms assessed routinely as part of the BIOPATH
study. If insufficient numbers of children from the BIOPATH study are recruited, the
following additional approaches will be used: (i) children from BIOPATH who take part in the
linked VaST study (which involves completing the MINI KID clinical interview) will be
approached if they meet inclusion criteria and are interested in accessing mental health
services; (ii) other children in the families who took part in BIOPATH (e.g., siblings and
cousins) and for whom families requested mental health services will be approached; (iii)
referrals will be accepted from other agencies; (iv) information sessions will be conducted
in the community (e.g., in Informal Tented Settlements) to inform families about the research
and allow them to request mental health assessment for their child(ren); (v) families in
contact with participating families will be able to contact the study for information and to
request mental health assessment for their child (snowballing approach).
Recruitment:
Primary caregivers will be contacted over the phone and offered clinical assessment for their
child at no cost, as part of routine clinical care. Families will be invited to attend an
appointment at an MdM clinic or be visited at home for this assessment. Families who attend
the appointment will first undertake a brief interview to establish the presenting problem.
Following this and providing children do not meet exclusion criteria, they will be offered
inclusion in the t-CETA study. Those who do not want to participate in research, or who
clearly meet exclusion criteria, will be offered a standard clinical intake assessment and
treatment as usual provided by Médecins du Monde. Those who do want to participate in
research will complete the informed consent process, and a clinical interview
(Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview For Children And Adolescents; MINI KID) and
severity score (Clinical Global Impression severity score; CGI-s) will then be used to guide
whether children meet inclusion criteria. Those who do not meet inclusion criteria or whose
difficulties are not appropriate for CETA will be offered treatment as usual by Médecins du
Monde or referral to another agency, as appropriate.
Following recruitment, participants will complete the first in-session assessment (see below
for assessment details) and be prepared for baseline assessments. A visual aids booklet will
be provided to assist with responding to questionnaire items and the child and caregiver will
have the opportunity to answer practice questions using the visual aids.
The baseline independent assessment will then be conducted via phone (see below for
assessment details).
Randomization and blinding:
Following baseline independent assessment participants will be randomized to either t-CETA or
treatment as usual (TaU) provided by Médecins du Monde (MdM). Stratified randomization will
be used by randomizing within each of the following four groups:
1. Males aged 8-12 years
2. Males aged 13-17 years
3. Females aged 8-12 years
4. Females aged 13-17 years
Participants and the treatment teams will not be blind to treatment allocation. The team
carrying out independent assessments and the team carrying out data analysis will be blind to
treatment allocation.
If participants do not agree to randomisation, they will be offered t-CETA only; treatment
and data collection will be identical to that described for children receiving t-CETA as part
of the RCT.
Treatment:
t-CETA: Children will receive telephone delivered therapy 1 or 2 times per week for up to 30
minutes per session. Treatment will take approximately 8-16 weeks. There will be some
variation in the number and content of treatment sessions because t-CETA will be tailored to
each participant depending on the presenting problem(s).
TaU: Children will receive case manager-led care, involving initial assessment by a case
manager, with intervention then provided by a case manager, and/or referral to a
psychotherapist or psychiatrist as necessary. Médecins du Monde's approach is based on a
joint collaboration between mental health trained case managers (who undergo extensive
training by experts in the field on topics including Psychological First Aid, Child
Protection, Gender Based Violence, etc.) and psychotherapists from different schools
(providing Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing [EMDR] for trauma, Interpersonal
Therapy [IPT] for depression, Cognitive Behavioural Therapy [CBT], motivational counselling,
familial or systemic therapy, and integrative approaches). Thus the number and content of
sessions, and the person delivering treatment (case manager, psychotherapist, psychiatrist)
will vary.
Supervision:
Both t-CETA and TaU teams will be closely supervised by experienced clinical psychologists.
Supervision will occur during weekly sessions, with more frequent supervision for challenging
cases and to manage safety issues.
Independent Assessments:
Trained assessors will be independent of the treatment team and blind to treatment condition.
They will conduct assessments over the phone (or face-to-face if phone assessment is not
possible). This will take approximately 30-45 minutes per child and 30-45 minutes per
caregiver. The assessment includes standardized questionnaires about the child's symptoms and
adaptive functioning. Participants will have the option to use the visual aids booklet
provided to help them respond to questions. Data will be entered into the online platform
Qualtrics, uploaded to a secure server. Participants will only be identified using an ID on
Qualtrics; identifying details will not be entered. The assessment process will be supervised
by a qualified clinical psychologist (Local PI, Dr Tania Bosqui).
Independent assessments will be conducted at baseline (pre-treatment), immediately following
treatment, and at three months follow-up.
In-session assessment:
The case managers providing treatment will conduct these assessments, hence they will not be
blind to treatment condition.
Client Monitoring Form (CMF): The CMF is a key part of t-CETA treatment: it is intended to
guide selection of t-CETA components and monitor progress. It is a questionnaire measure and
is developed to be specific to each population in which CETA or t-CETA is used. In this study
it will also be used with children receiving TaU. It will be administered at baseline and
then weekly at the beginning of treatment sessions.
PSYCHLOPS: This questionnaire will be used during the first treatment session, during the
session that is the approximate mid-point, and the final session.
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