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Clinical Trial Summary

This research program aims to investigate the implementation and effects of a theoretical promising prevention method developed in a European research collaboration within a Comenius project (2012-2015) between 6 European universities (in Malta, Italy, Greece, Croatia, Portugal and Sweden) with the purpose of enhancing European children's resilience.

RESCUR in Sweden is a RCT study of the Resilience Curriculum (RESCUR) that is taking place in Sweden 2017-2019. The Swedish name is "Jag vill, jag kan, jag törs!". The study is performed by Junis, IOGT-NTO's Junior Association, in conjunction with researchers at Göteborg, Umeå and Stockholm Universities and is being funded by the Public Health Agency of Sweden.

Around, 1,000 children of the ages 7-12 will, through their schools and associations, or via groups in social services, be made acquainted with the material The children will learn and practice Mindfulness activities, storytelling activities, group discussions and much more, all designed to strengthen protective factors and increase their resilience. The program also involves parents taking part in the work to reinforce children's protective factors.

Based on the work with groups of children, an effectiveness study including at children aged 7-12 in school classes, with randomized and controlled pre- and post-measurements, self-rating questionnaires and group observations takes place. The program will also be implemented in a non-governmental organization and in groups in social services. The study also investigates the forms of implementation


Clinical Trial Description

This research program aims to investigate the implementation and effects of a theoretical promising prevention method developed in a European research collaboration within a Comenius project (2012-2015) between 6 European universities (in Malta, Italy, Greece, Croatia, Portugal and Sweden) with the purpose of enhancing European children's resilience.

RESCUR in Sweden is a RCT study of the Resilience Curriculum (RESCUR) that is taking place in Sweden 2017-2019. The Swedish name is "Jag vill, jag kan, jag törs!". The study is performed by Junis, IOGT-NTO's Junior Association, in conjunction with researchers at Göteborg, Umeå and Stockholm Universities and is being funded by the Public Health Agency of Sweden.

The primary aim is to strengthen protective factors and promote childhood life changes for 7-12 years who are relatives of people with addiction problems and to contribute to the support that Swedish society gives these children. This means a preventive intervention targeted towards those who have an increased risk of developing addiction problems and other problems that are consequences of their situation. A secondary aim at the universal level is to promote protective factors among children of the same ages, and to prevent the development of drug addiction in among children.

In order to increase our chances of achieving the aims, we are implementing the project as a collaboration between practitioners and researchers. Our aim is also to increase the relevance of the project as well as the development of knowledge and improve practical implementation. Moreover, this can also provide an increased opportunity to disseminate experience also to other groups and activities after the method has been tested and evaluated based on the Swedish context and in the three priority areas - social services, a NGO and schools.

The research includes five research questions:

1. How can participants in the implementation of the program be recruited?

2. How can leaders be supported to enable the implementation of the high-quality program?

3. What is the significance of the program for children's development and mental health?

4. Does the program work differently for different groups in relation to gender, social background, place of residence and age?

5. Does the intervention work differently at a universal, selective or indicative level?

Research questions will be studied through an implementation evaluation, using self-assessment forms, interviews and observations using an established "checklist", as well as through an impact assessment, which has a randomized, controlled pre-post design, and in which self-reports, interviews and adult reports of testing instruments are used. Our main target group for research is children who are seven to twelve years in Sweden and who are in one of the organizations school, social services or the value-based organization IOGT-NTO's Junior Association, Junis. A secondary target is the deliverers.

The project is divided into three phases. The first phase involved planning and a preliminary study including the application for research ethics committee (first year). We started the project, formed a project team and appointed a project manager, worked on the manuals to make them more user-friendly, informed and marketed the project to organizations and policy-makers, recruited participants for the evaluation, finalized the project and research plan, including all measuring instruments. The ethical review board approved the research project.

The project is based on close cooperation between Junis and the research group with a clear division of work and responsibility. The purpose of Junis's activities is to provide health promotion for children aged 7-15 years in an encouraging environment where the child's self-esteem and self-confidence grow together with secure and safe adults. The organization is be responsible for planning and implementing the program in all groups. The research group is responsible for the scientific study of implementation and effects of the program for the participants in groups and school classes that are part of intervention and control groups. The research is a randomized, controlled, longitudinal survey of the RESCUR program. This means a baseline measurements before the intervention begins and follow up at six months, one year and then two years.

The second phase involves implementing the program "Jag vill, jag lkan, jag törs!" (RESCUR) in Junis' group activities, in groups through social services and in school classes in different municipalities and spread across the country (ie. in different housing areas). The third phase involves analysis and reporting from the project's implementation and its effects.

The project will be carefully evaluated from two perspectives, implementation and impact. We will study the implementation through both self-assessment forms, reported by group leaders when the program has been used for half a year, and observations made according to a formalized checklist. The implementation of the method is fundamental in order to properly evaluate the effect of the method, which is the second part of the evaluation of the project. At the same time, we are also interested in directly studying the extent to which it is possible to implement the method as intended.

The effect of the method on protective factors and resilience will be measured via a randomized, controlled pre-post follow-up design with two types of groups. We will study the effect of the method from both a statistical significance perspective and a practical relevance perspective [62]. We will use our waiting list to create a control condition. The waiting list group is offered to start the intervention one year after base line measurements has taken place. We make a pre-measurement before the intervention begins among the participants, even adult reports will be collected, as well as measurements after one semester, one year and two years.

The controlled study has three different arms. In the case of schools, we have cluster randomize participants to one of two conditions, (A) intervention schools or (B) waiting list or control schools. Randomization has been done at school level. Thereafter, the baseline measurements were performed in both conditions, and after that, the intervention group began the action and measurements were made as described above (Table 1). One year after the baseline measurement intervention group (A) the waiting list group began the program. Measurements are finally made a year later.

In the case of Junis's groups, it was not feasible to do a cluster randomization at the managerial level as the involvement of local chapters was more difficult to achieve. The groups will be led by regular June volunteers.

As for the social service group, we will have the same arrangement and no waiting-list control condition. Here, a new round of groups is planned in the second year. On the other hand, we will have a follow-up measurement of the first wave's intervention groups in year 3 for both Junis and the social services groups. The groups will be run by social workers.

A calculation of the statistical power has been made for the interventions. In the universal intervention, an effect size of d = 0.3 and a power of 0.8 and the corresponding statistics are expected to test a group size of 176 in each group. The recruitment of schools for the evaluation of RESCUR has been completed. The data collection sites are recruited from different part of Sweden as well as in both urban and rural areas. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03655418
Study type Interventional
Source Göteborg University
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date January 4, 2017
Completion date December 2019

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