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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01542398
Other study ID # PREC 06-2012
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
First received
Last updated
Start date March 2012
Est. completion date July 2012

Study information

Verified date June 2018
Source Queen's University, Belfast
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The main research question of the study is whether a family-based, life-skills focused psychosocial intervention is effective in reducing psychological distress and stigma and improving inter-personal relations and functioning among war-affected children in the Democratic Republic of Congo.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 159
Est. completion date July 2012
Est. primary completion date April 2012
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 7 Years to 99 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- War-affected

- eastern Democratic Republic of Congo

- Formerly abducted child or vulnerable child

Exclusion Criteria:

- severe/violent behavioural problems

- severe learning difficulties

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Family-Focused, Community-Based, Resilience-Targetting Psychosocial Intervention
A 12-module manualised intervention focusing on reducing psychological distress, improving family and community functioning and boosting daily functioning of adolescents through the use of Mobile Cinema Screenings and task-based, participatory, group-sessions

Locations

Country Name City State
Congo Dungu Dungu Haut-Uele

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Queen's University, Belfast Discover the Journey, Harvard School of Public Health

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Congo, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Reduction in Post-traumatic Stress Reaction Symptoms Among Participants To assess post-traumatic stress reaction symptoms the 8-item Impact of Events Scale (CRIES-8) was used (Yule, 1997). Respondents indicating how frequently they experience a symptom on a 4-point Likert scale (0, 1, 2, 3). Thus the minimum score was 0 while the maximum score was 24. A high score indicates a high level of post-traumatic stress symptoms. This 8-item CRIES, which was designed for children over 7 years of age, has an identical factor structure to the 22-item version (Yule, 1997) which was previously validated with a sample of 1,046 war-affected adolescents in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (Mels, Derluyn, Broekaert & Rosseel, 2010) (internal reliability range: 0·79 to 0·84; Cronbach's alpha for the total scale: 0·93). In the current study, internal consistency was 0·557. 1-week before intervention, 3-weeks later
Secondary African Youth Psychosocial Assessment Inventory - Depression and Anxiety Subscales Internalising symptoms were assessed using the African Youth Psychosocial Assessment Instrument (AYPA) (Betancourt et al., 2009).This 17 item Likert (0 = minimum, 51 = maximum) measure was developed in northern Uganda after extensive qualitative consultation with young people, caregivers and mental health workers. A high score on the AYPA indicates a high level of internalizing symptoms. It is the only African developed, validated questionnaire available, had been used in separate studies with war-affected children in the DR Congo (McMullen et al., 2013; O'Callaghan, McMullen, Shannon, Rafferty & Black; 2013) and includes symptoms of distress which do not appear in Western-developed measures (e.g. muttering to oneself, feeling pain in your heart, sitting with your head in your hand etc.). Test-retest reliability (carried out with a subset of 30 participants) for the AYPA was 0·91, inter-rater reliability was 0·58 (n = 26) and internal consistency was 0·787 (internalising symptoms). pre-intervention, 3 weeks later
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