Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Increasing Adolescent Depression Literacy on Treatment-Seeking Behavior
The primary goal of the proposed research is to assess the effectiveness of the Adolescent Depression Awareness Program (ADAP), a school-based depression education program, in increasing depression literacy and treatment seeking in high school students. The ADAP intervention will be carried out in approximately 60 schools with over 15,000 students. The following are ADAP Implementation Sites: Baltimore Archdiocese High Schools; New Castle County, Delaware; Washtenaw County, Michigan; and York County, Pennsylvania.
The primary goal of the proposed research is to assess the effectiveness of the Adolescent
Depression Awareness Program (ADAP), a school-based depression education program, in
increasing depression literacy and treatment seeking. This proposal will have broad reach as
the intervention will be carried out in 66 schools with over 15,000 students.
The lifetime prevalence of Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) in the United States is high,
ranging from 15% to 17%. Its usual symptom onset occurs early in life, during teen or young
adult years. It has been estimated that 8.5% of youth ages 12 to 17 (over 2 million
adolescents) experienced at least one Major Depressive Episode in the past year (SAMHSA
Office of Applied Studies, 2008). Nearly half (48.3%) of these youth reported severe
impairment in at least one of four major role domains (home, school/work, family
relationships, or social life). The onset of depression during adolescence is associated
with increased risks for educational underachievement, unemployment, early parenthood,
substance dependence, anxiety disorders, and recurrent major depression during early
adulthood (Fergusson & Woodward, 2002). The most severe consequence of untreated depression
is suicide. Psychological autopsy studies of adolescent suicides have reported that upwards
of 90% had at least one psychiatric disorder at the time of their death, most notably
depression (Marttunen et al., 1990; Brent et al., 1993; Shaffer et al., 1996). From a
developmental perspective, the prevention and treatment of depression during adolescence can
provide lifelong benefits. Effective treatments for adolescent depression are available
(TADS, 2007); however, adolescents in need of treatment are often not recognized by parents,
teachers, or peers. The National Comorbidity Study-Replication estimated a median delay of 8
years between the onset of depressive symptoms and receiving treatment (Wang et al., 2006).
The early identification of depression leading to effective treatment can help address the
morbidity and mortality associated with adolescent depression.
Despite the importance of adolescent depression, there have been few large-scale randomized
trials investigating the effectiveness of universal interventions targeting depression among
adolescents. ADAP is a 3-hour high school-based curriculum, proposed herein to be delivered
as part of the standard high school health education curriculum, aimed at improving
depression literacy. The mission of ADAP is to educate high school students, teachers, and
parents about teenage unipolar and bipolar depression (Hess et al., 2004). The core message
of ADAP is that "depression is a treatable medical illness." ADAP was developed in 1999 by a
team of psychiatrists and psychiatric nurses from the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine. In the past decade, ADAP has been implemented in over 85 schools with over 20,000
students throughout the United States. Previously published research evaluating ADAP
described a significant improvement in adolescents' knowledge about depression after
receiving the curriculum using a one group pretest/posttest design (Swartz et al., 2008).
Recently, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, comparison schools were included, and it was found that the
proportion of students achieving "depression literacy" (scoring 80% or higher on our
knowledge assessment) more than tripled from pretest to posttest (Leon et al., in review) in
the ADAP group. To date, a randomized design has not been employed and the impact of ADAP on
treatment seeking behaviors has not been studied. Both of these issues are important to
address before ADAP can be routinely integrated into high school health education curricula.
The specific aims of this proposal are as follows:
Specific Aim 1: To assess the effectiveness of ADAP, a school-based depression education
program, in increasing depression literacy.
1.1 To assess depression literacy changes following the intervention, as compared to the
standard health education curriculum, with a post-test at 6 weeks post intervention.
1.2 To assess the sustainability of depression literacy changes with a post-test at 4 months
post ADAP.
Specific Aim 2: To assess whether the ADAP intervention, as compared to the standard health
curriculum, has an influence on treatment seeking behaviors in high school students, as
measured by an increase in visits to school counselors and self-reported treatment seeking.
2.1 To track mental health help-seeking and the receipt of mental health services pre and
post ADAP in a subset of schools (28 schools in York County Pennsylvania and St. Francis
Indian School on the Rosebud Indian Reservation served by the Indian Health Service).
2.2 To track mental health visits to school counselors in aggregate pre and post ADAP in all
66 participating schools.
Specific Aim 3: To identify possible mediators (e.g., fidelity) and moderators of
intervention impact (e.g., access to community mental health services, teacher
characteristics, school characteristics, parental participation in the community forum;
stigma).
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