Mental Health Disorder Clinical Trial
Official title:
Youth Functioning and Organizational Success for West African Regional Development: Pilot
Objectives: The objectives of this research proposal are to study the delivery of an
evidence-based mental health intervention in the alternate setting of youth employment
programs tied to regional economic development and to examine the use of an Interagency
Collaborative Team Approach (ICTA) as an implementation scale-up strategy that addresses the
human resource shortage and related access to care and capacity challenges in low- and
middle-income countries (LMICs). Specifically, this study aims to examine the incorporation
of the evidence-based Youth Readiness Intervention (YRI) into a program that promotes
employment among youth through a pilot study and scale-up intervention study in Sierra Leone.
Study population: The study population includes youth participants, ages 18-26, with elevated
t-scores on assessments of functional impairment and emotional dysregulation, who live in the
Kailhun District of Sierra Leone.
Pilot study design: A cluster randomized three-arm trial will be employed in the pilot phase
in the same districts as the scale-up study. Youth participants (N=180, 18-26 years old, 50%
female), stratified by gender, will be randomized into the three study arms. Once youth
participants are enrolled into the study, they will be assigned to community level sites
based on geographical location. Each of these community level sites will make up one cluster.
The clusters will then be randomly assigned into the three study arms so that sixty youth
participants will be randomized into the youth entrepreneurship training (EPP) arm, sixty
youth participants will be randomized into the YRI+EPP arm, and sixty youth participants will
be randomized into the control arm . The pilot study will last approximately 12 weeks and
data will be collected at baseline and post-intervention. Further, investigators will survey
120 third-party reporters for a total pilot study sample size of 300 participants.
Pilot study primary outcomes: The primary outcomes of the pilot study are to assess
implementation science aspects related to a new partnership with the Deutsche Gesellschaft
für Internationale Zusammenarbeit's (GIZ), who will fund and deliver the entrepreneurship
training. This will include pretesting the measures battery, assessing the logistics of
integrating the YRI into the entrepreneurship training, and testing use of the Interagency
Collaborative Team Approach to training, supervision, and fidelity monitoring.
Pilot study aims
1. To examine the psychometric properties of an existing measures battery as well as a new
battery for third-party reporting,
2. To assess and adjust as needed structures for training and supervision, including the
ICTA, and methods for conducting process evaluations of implementation procedures, and;
3. To assess the feasibility of integrating the YRI into the entrepreneurship training
(EPP) and using the ICTA to deliver an evidence-informed intervention in Sierra Leone.
Study design
The investigators are proposing to conduct a small cluster randomized pilot study with a
sample of 180 youth participants, aged 18 to 26 years old. Gender within the sample will be
evenly split with 50% male and 50% female youth participants. GIZ will initiate recruitment
of and selection of youth participants. An electronic database will only be used by members
of the research team to contact the youth participants about participating in the research
study. An additional screening will be completed to ensure candidates meet specific study
eligibility criteria. Given the socioemotional aims of the YRI, youth participants must
demonstrate impaired functioning and emotional dysregulation.
The research team will use the information in the database to contact the EPP-selected
individuals about participating in our study. Research team members will first attempt to
reach EPP-selected individuals by telephone, using the telephone numbers provided in the
database. If an EPP-selected individual is not reachable by telephone, the research team will
attempt to locate the youth participants at their residence, using the information in the
database. Because GIZ is a well-known organization in Sierra Leone that has been working in
the country for many decades and supports a number of employment programs in Kono, Kailahun
and Koinadugu districts, the investigators do not expect this method of contacting youth to
cause them any adverse effects.
During the in-person appointment, the research team member will go through the informed
consent process for the screening, the potential participant will give consent (or not) and
the research team member will conduct the mental health screening. After this process, these
potential participants will be told to wait for follow-up communication from the research
team. Study investigators have used similar procedures in past studies with success when
contacting potential study participants.
After all candidates have been screened, a list of those who meet study criteria will be
created and youth will be assigned to community level sites based on geographical location.
Each of these community level sites will make up one cluster. The clusters will be randomized
into three arms - sixty youth participants will be randomized to receive the EPP only, sixty
youth participants will be randomized to receive YRI+EPP, and sixty youth participants will
be randomized into the control group. At least 180 youth participants will be recruited
assuming 15-20% attrition of subjects, informed by previous work in the region. Given gender
and cultural norms in Sierra Leone, the YRI+EPP groups will be segregated by sex and these
groups will be led by same-sex facilitators.
The pilot will be conducted in Kailhun District, which is one of the districts where GIZ
operates their employment program. This is also a districts where GIZ has historically
worked.
Once the SPs have been on boarded, the in-country leadership team will meet with SP staff to
discuss the YRI and EPP in-depth and assess interest in being a part of the seed team.
Selection of the seed team will be followed by a two-week training, which includes the YRI
and ICTA.
Although this pilot involves a small sample size and is only powered to detect large
differences between the intervention groups (YRI+EPP and EPP-only) and control group (no
treatment), investigators are most interested in assessing the feasibility of integrating the
YRI into the EPP and using the ICTA to deliver an evidence-informed intervention in a setting
like Sierra Leone while maintaining intervention quality and improving delivery, as well as
pretesting the measures battery before the tools are used in the full scale-up study. The
proposed pilot study design will allow study investigators to examine the psychometric
properties of measures and do a preliminary assessment on feasibility of program integration
and seed team functioning and general patterns of improvement whereby investigators expect to
see greater improvement among youth in the YRI+EPP compared to EPP only.
Intervention delivery
Both the YRI and EPP will be delivered over three months. The YRI, which typically assumes a
three-month delivery period (12 sessions in total, 1 delivered per week), will be delivered
with two sessions per week allowing for a 1.5-month delivery period during the pilot phase.
Youth participants will then complete the business skills modules of the EPP, which are
expected to take another 1.5 months. While the scale-up study allows for the YRI to be
delivered (0-3 months) followed by the EPP (3-6 months), the pilot approach will condense the
implementation of the YRI to provide sufficient time to initiate pilot-driven changes and
obtain Institutional Review Board (IRB) and local approvals before the scale-up is launched.
YRI facilitators will be selected from staff at the SPs selected by GIZ to deliver the EPP
training modules. Training and utilization of staff within the ICTA model addresses core
issues of sustainability within the pilot and larger scale-up study. The in-country
leadership team will assess agency staff to determine those best suited to deliver the
YRI+EPP, especially as it concerns this innovative approach to supervision and service
delivery.
A sample of YRI facilitators will be selected to form a seed team as part of the ICTA within
this pilot study. The seed team will work across study sites to engage in routine information
sharing to promote ongoing intervention fidelity and promote cross-site learning. Those
chosen to be a part of the seed team will receive training on this approach by in-country
experts (Dr. Akinsulure-Smith and trained Caritas Freetown research team members) who have
experience with previous YRI research in Sierra Leone. By incorporating the ICTA into the
pilot, study investigators will be able to utilize the pilot seed team to train and supervise
the larger team for the scale-up study.
Monitoring and evaluation
Data will be collected pre- and post-intervention by a strong team of in-country experts.
Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA) will oversee and conduct quantitative data collection
(youth assessment battery, seed team assessment battery, dissemination and implementation
measures) and analysis while Caritas Freetown will oversee and conduct qualitative data
collection as well as the assessment battery for the third-party reporters. IPA is a lead
institution for designing randomized control and randomized cluster applied research on
economic and health outcomes in a number of LMICs and has worked with Dr. Betancourt in
varying capacities in Sierra Leone.
From previous iterations of the YRI in Sierra Leone, the quantitative assessment battery for
youth participants underwent a thorough development, translation and validation process. All
survey tools were subjected to forward and backward translation from English to Sierra
Leonean Krio utilizing the WHO process of translation and adaptation of instruments, Measures
have been subjected to cognitive testing to ensure comprehension and cultural relevance in
assessing mental health, daily functioning, and other life outcomes. However, measures on
socioeconomic status and economic self-sufficiency did not perform well in the GCC pilot
study. Study investigators have explored the reasons why and revised the tool used and
selected new measures, both of which will need to be piloted before being broadly used in the
scale-up study. Since the impact of the YRI on socioeconomic status and economic
self-sufficiency of youth participants is one of the aspects of the scale-up study
investigators will be assessing, it is vital to test these new measures to get a sense of
appropriateness and performance before including them in the scale-up study. The measures
utilized in the pilot study will be refined and utilized in the scale-up. IPA frequently
hires local individuals for short-term data collection assignments. To develop skills and
capacity and promote consistency, IPA makes an effort to hire the same individuals whenever
data collection opportunities arise. Thus, over time, these individuals have gained
experience in data collection and data management and have been trained in all aspects of the
research process by IPA permanent, experienced, qualified staff. IPA maintains a database of
these individuals, and this will be used to select the data collection team who will work on
our pilot and scale-up studies.
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