Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05103540 |
Other study ID # |
BU/002/21 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 2023 |
Est. completion date |
June 2025 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2023 |
Source |
Babcock University |
Contact |
Olumide Abiodun |
Phone |
+2347038569725 |
Email |
abioduno[@]babcock.edu.ng |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The research will use the Social Ecologic Model of behavior and WHO mhGAP framework to design
a comprehensive intervention across three levels (individual, interpersonal, and social) of
influence. The study will then pilot the intervention in 15 secondary schools through a
Stepped-Wedge Cluster-Randomized trial. After screening for eligibility and selecting
participating schools and individuals, investigators will randomize at the cluster level and
switch the groups from control to intervention arms at three months' intervals till the
research has moved all the clusters. The study will collect data at baseline, the switch
points, and the end of the study. The goal is to evaluate the feasibility, effectiveness of a
comprehensive suicide behavior prevention intervention among in-school adolescents in
Nigeria. Another aim is to identify barriers and facilitators of implementation and the best
practices for scaling up the intervention. It is hypothesized that because our intervention
is based on the best contextual evidence and built on a sound theoretical model, it will
successfully mitigate suicide ideation. Also, the nature and efficiency of the stepped wedge
cluster randomized design will enhance the feasibility in the local context, characterized by
political, logistic, and ethical constraints.
Description:
The effect of comprehensive suicide behavior prevention intervention among in-school
adolescents Nigeria: a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial
This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of a theory-based comprehensive
suicide behavior prevention intervention among in-school adolescents in the Ikenne local
government area (LGA) of Ogun State, Nigeria. The methodology of the study is a Stepped-wedge
cluster-randomized trial of a suicide behavior intervention among fifteen secondary schools
in Nigeria. The study chose the stepped-wedge design because although the investigators
expect the intervention to reduce suicidal ideation, the feasibility of a full implementation
may be challenging due to political, logistical, and ethical constraints. The design fulfills
a secondary role of serving as a scientific tool to incorporate a fair method to determine
the order of intervention rollout under logistic impediments. The implementation of our
intervention is feasible only at the cluster level.
Investigators will conduct a Stepped-Wedge Cluster Randomized Trail among 15 secondary
schools over one year. The participating schools will cross in a one-way switch over from the
control to the intervention period. The sequence of switch over for the clusters will follow
a stratified randomization scheme. All the schools will receive the intervention by the end
of the study. All the groups will be recruited at the study onset and will act as control
until the point of randomization into the intervention group. To mitigate contamination, the
study will provide clear information on the purpose of the research to the participants. The
clusters will get the details of intervention at the point of switching into the experimental
group. The study will educate the intervention group against contamination. Also, the
investigators will assess the exposure of the control group to the intervention before
switching them. The study will report the level of contamination.
The study will recruit 15 secondary schools with a minimum of 100 enrolled students and do
not have an existing suicide behavior intervention program. The school boards need to approve
participation. Eligible students should be aged 10-19 years, give consent, and not have plans
of leaving the school in the next year. Parental/guardians' assent is also a prerequisite for
participation in the study. The study will not exclude non-participating students from the
delivery of the intervention. The study will randomly select, by balloting, Five (three
publicly and two privately-owned) schools in each of the three areas of the LGA. The
selection of students will follow a probability sampling method. Eligible schools will be
randomized into three sequences of five schools each, using a computer-generated stratified
randomized sampling scheme. The stratification, which will be according to the area and
ownership of the schools, will be supervised by the PIs. The nature of the experiment and
intervention makes blinding unrealistic. However, investigators will ensure the conduct of
the measurement of the study outcome objectively.
The intervention is a four-pronged comprehensive suicidal behavior prevention intervention in
schools. The prongs consist of evidence-based interventions that use the Social Ecological
Model (SEM). The SEM theorizes that there are multiple inter-related levels of influences on
human behavior, and a successful preventive program should address factors at each stratum.
The intervention addresses three levels; individual, interpersonal, and social. Firstly, the
research will collaborate with relevant stakeholders to design and obtain a commitment from
the schools to a suicidal behavior prevention policy and protocol document. Secondly, the
intervention will train staff and students on best practices to improve students'
connectedness thereby, creating a positive school environment. Thirdly, the study will
identify and train gatekeepers on the proper response to suicidal thoughts and other suicidal
behaviors; and serve as the link between the students and a school-linked mental health
specialist. The research will train the gatekeepers to use school-based screening tools.
Lastly, this research will educate all students on suicidal behaviors.
This prong will create awareness, promote case-finding, and provide information about
available mental health resources. Also, the intervention will address the stereotypes that
promote stigma and improve the students' coping abilities. The entire intervention will
incorporate peer support and student involvement at all stages of planning and
implementation.
The primary outcome is suicidal ideation, as assessed by the Positive Inventory of the
Positive and negative Suicide Ideation (PANSI-PI). PANSI is a 14-item scale consisting of two
subscales, the 6-item positive scale (PANSI-PI) and the 8-item negative (PANSI-NSA). Higher
scores on PANSI-NSI scale and lower marks on PANSI-PI) symbolize the higher frequency of
suicidal thoughts. The secondary outcomes are grit, gratitude, and mental health status. The
study will use the gratitude questionnaire(GQ-6), the grit scales, and the General Health
Questionnaire (GHQ-12) to assess gratitude, determination, and mental health status,
respectively.
The sample size was determined using the Shiny CRT Calculator, a power and sample size tool
for cluster-randomized trials. The aim was to have three sequences with five clusters each,
assuming an intra-cluster correlation coefficient of 0.01 (0 to 0.02) and individual
autocorrelation of 0.08. The study desires a minimum statistical power of at least 90%,
considering a type I error of 5% and a 10% increase in the mean PANSI-PI score from 17.71
(_6:35) attributable to the intervention. Some allowance will be made for a school dropout
rate of 23.12%. The derived sample size was 30 per cluster.
The study will analyze the data using Stata/SE 15.1 statistical software. The statistical
analysis is rooted in the principle of intention-to-treat and will use random effect mixed
modeling to address missing data while assuming that missingness is at random. The research
will use the linear mixed model for continuous outcomes and the generalized linear mixed
model for categorical outcomes and adjust for the possible confounding effects of
individual-level characteristics that our randomization did not capture. Also, the study will
adjust for age, sex, number of years in the school, ethnicity, and secular trends (the school
term), and will use multilevel analysis to adjust for cluster effect and the correlation
between repeated measurements.
The expected outcome of the research includes a suicidal behavior prevention policy and
protocol template for secondary schools in Nigeria and an effective suicide behavior
prevention program that is scalable for Ogun State, Nigeria.