Help-Seeking Behavior Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of Mental Health First Aid From the Perspective of Workplace End Users - EMPOWER: Protocol of Trial Phase
This trial will evaluate the effectiveness of Mental Health First Aid in the workplace. Half of the organisations will receive Mental Health First Aid training and half will receive treatment as usual (a brief consultation from Mental health First Aid England on mental health and well-being in the workplace).
The EMPOWER study will implement a cluster randomised controlled trial (cRCT) to examine the
effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of MHFA in the workplace on help-seeking behaviours of
employees, with embedded qualitative, process and social impact evaluations . In order to
best answer questions regarding effectiveness, mechanisms and acceptability/feasibility, a
design combining a RCT with a qualitative component will be adopted. The qualitative
component will assess the efficiency, utility, usability, feasibility, acceptability as well
as the mechanisms underlying the intervention. This registration details the trial element of
EMPOWER only.
Data will be collected from employees working in eligible UK organisations expressing an
interest to MHFAE in undertaking MHFA training. Organisations expressing an interest
(directly to MHFAE), who are willing to take part in the study will be asked to contact
Graham Durcan (Centre for Mental Health) for detailed information about the study. If willing
to take part, organisations will sign a written agreement and their contact details will be
sent to the research team. The research team will email the lead contact, detailing what will
happen next, asking for company demographics and requesting organisations send a standard
email to ALL employees providing information about the study with a link to the survey for
completion of baseline measures. Consent will be sought, using Qualtrics, before completing
the online survey. One, two and three weeks later the research team will send the
organisation lead another standard email, to be sent to all employees, as a gentle reminder
to complete the survey. After this period, participants who have not completed the survey
will be treated as lost to follow-up.
Organisations will be assigned randomly to the intervention or control arm after completing
baseline measures, using computer-generated random numbers through Random.org:
https://www.random.org/randomness/. An independent researcher not associated with the study
will generate the random sequence and communicate this via email to the research team. The
unit of randomisation is organisation and randomisation of organisations will be stratified
by size of organisation, with three strata being defined22, small (< 50 employees), medium
(50-249 employees) and large (> 250 employees).
To optimize completion of follow-up measures, at each follow-up point the research team will
send organisations up to four weekly email reminders to ask employees to complete measures.
Participant data will be exported from Qualtrics into SPSS version 22 by the research team
(and any hard copies entered manually), stored on a password-protected network drive, will be
accessible only to research team members and will only be linked directly with their
participant ID code. Any hard copies of data will be destroyed by confidential waste disposal
fifteen years after the research findings have been published. Electronic copies of data will
be stored in two archives. In both cases, only anonymous data will be archived at London
South Bank University archive and a national data repository.
Data monitoring will be conducted by the Trial Steering Committee (TSC) comprising a
trialist, statistician and health economist and will act as Data Safety Monitoring Board
(DSMB). The TSC will oversee the conduct of the trial independently of and on behalf of the
project funders and sponsors and ensure it is carried out with reference to good practice.
The TSC will have ultimate responsibility for deciding if the trial should be stopped on
grounds of efficacy. The TSC is a sub-group of the project Expert Reference Group (ERG) set
up by the funders, and will audit the trial conduct through reports submitted to it by the
researchers on a three-monthly basis'
We anticipate little risk to participants in the study. The Senior Manager in each company
will be asked to report to the CI in writing any adverse or untoward incidents that occur
because of the study. The CI will assess each adverse event and decide on an appropriate
course of action. In case of Serious Adverse Events (SAEs), i.e. those causing serious injury
or death, the CI will notify the Ethics Committee and the TSC as soon as possible after being
notified. A TSC within the ERG consisting of members independent of the investigators, their
employing organisations, funders and sponsor will monitor trial progress and conduct and will
have ultimate responsibility for deciding if the trial should be stopped on the grounds of
safety.
The sample size calculation is based on a simplification of the proposed analysis model.
To be able to detect a change of two additional help seeking resources11, with 80% power at
the 0.05 alpha level, assuming that the mean in the control group is 1 and in the
intervention group 3 with a common standard deviation of 8, 506 participants are required,
increasing to 596 allowing for 15% attrition at 6 months. Pilot data indicates a response
rate of 40% across organisations and an average cluster size of 72 employees (calculated from
organisations currently signed up) therefore approximately 29 employees per organisation
(cluster size). With 24 clusters, 12 organisations per condition, and assuming an intraclass
correlation coefficient (ICC) equal to 0.01 (ICC's are lower for participant outcomes as
opposed to process variables, when cluster size is large and when estimates are adjusted by
participant baseline characteristics21) a minimum target sample size is 763, rounded up to
800, 400 per condition
All outcomes will be described with the appropriate descriptive statistics: mean and standard
deviation for continuous outcomes (or medians and interquartile range for skewed data), and
counts and percentages for dichotomous and categorical outcomes.
The analysis of the primary outcome will estimate the mean difference (with 95% confidence
intervals) in the Actual Help-Seeking score at 6-month follow-up between the intervention
(MHFA) and standard care groups using a mixed effects repeated measures model (which assumes
incomplete outcome data to be missing at random). The model will incorporate demographic and
other baseline covariates as fixed effects. The dependent variable will be the count of help
sources on the Actual Help-Seeking questionnaire. The independent variable will be 'time
point'. The effect size of the intervention will be estimated as the exponentiated
coefficient for the interaction term between time-point (baseline versus 6-months follow-up)
and intervention status (MHFA versus control group). A random effect of participant will be
included in the model to adjust for the repeated measures on participants. 'Employing
organisation' will be included as a higher level random effect (with participants nested in
employers). Statistical significance will be at the 5% level.
Secondary outcomes will be analysed using an appropriate generalised linear model, for
example binary logistic regression for dichotomous outcomes and ordinal logistic regression
for ordered categorical outcomes. All models will be adjusted for employing organisation and
baseline score (where applicable).
Age, gender, level of education, ethnicity, nature and frequency of and MHFA interventions
directly experienced will be included in the primary analysis as covariates.
The missing at random assumption for primary outcome data will be assessed further in
sensitivity analyses. Treatment effects will be estimated under varying assumptions of data
being missing not at random using pattern‐mixture models. A complete case analysis will also
be conducted.
Graham Durcan from The Centre for Mental Health (CMH) has oversight of the project management
on behalf of the funders. The Chief Investigator [CI] (Callaghan) has overall responsibility
for the research.
A Research Management Group (RMG), which the CI will chair, comprising all authors, will
advise and assist on the project's management. The RMG meets every 6 weeks.
An Expert Reference Group (ERG), a group of independent research experts and lay people and
the CI, will provide subject matter expertise to the funders and work with the CMH and London
South Bank University's representatives to guide and oversee the impact of the research. The
ERG meets quarterly for the entirety of the project's duration.
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