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Improving Child Mental Health Service Utilization in Ibadan

Not Applicable
Conditions
Mental Health Issue
Interventions
Behavioral: IUSECAMH Parent Intervention (Waitlist)
Registration Number
NCT04627792
Lead Sponsor
Howard University
Brief Summary

The investigators will develop and evaluate a community-based participatory intervention that will be principally guided by the model we test and confirm in Aim 1. To meet this second aim, ten guardian consultants will co-develop and co-implement a group intervention whose goal is to increase 100 guardians' recognition and knowledge of CAMH problems, perceived need for CAMH services, and willingness to use accessible services at UCH. The investigators will also evaluate the process of developing, planning, and administering a CBP intervention in Nigeria and draw broader implications for CBP programming in other LMICs.

Detailed Description

One hundred participants will be randomly recruited from the cohort of guardians who completed the interview in Phase 1 and expressed interest in participating in an intervention. The investigators will use a switching replication design in which fifty guardians will be randomly assigned using a lottery to receive the intervention and fifty will be assigned to a group who will receive the intervention at a later time point.127 The latter group will serve as a control in the first part of the intervention plan, and the roles will be switched in the second part. The investigators will initially propose 4 intervention sessions, each comprised of 2 meetings, lasting 1.5 hours each for 25 guardians. Two sessions will be conducted concurrently for Group 1 (n=50) followed by 2 sessions concurrently conducted for Group 2 (n=50). The program outcomes - guardian recognition and knowledge of CAMH problems, the perceived need for CAMH services, and willingness to use accessible CAMH services - will be measured with the same instruments administered in Aim 1

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  • Participated in Phase 1 of student (participated in structured interview)
Exclusion Criteria

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Waitlist GroupIUSECAMH Parent Intervention (Waitlist)We will use a switching replication design in which fifty guardians will be randomly assigned using a lottery to receive the intervention and fifty will be assigned to a group who will receive the intervention at a later time point
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Perceived need for CAMH servicesup to 2 months

Adapted from the 2001 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs in the United States (Porterfield \& McBride, 2007), we asked caregivers: "Has there been a time in past year when your child/ any of your children (1) seemed sad and did not feel like doing anything over 2 weeks (yes/no)?; (2) not able to sit still or concentrate for long, always getting into trouble (yes/no)?; (3) displayed strange public behavior such as talking or laughing to themselves when no one is around (yes/no)?; (4) behaved in any way or reported feeling anyway that worried them, you, or others in your family or community?" If caregivers affirmed any of the 4 statements, they were subsequently asked: "During the past 12 months, was there any time when your child needed help because you were worried about the problems you just described? (yes/no)" Responses to the final question (0=no; 1=yes) was used to determine perceived need of CAMH services.

Guardian recognition and knowledge of CAMH problemsup to 2 months

This was assessed by the Yorùbá version of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire - Parent Report (SDQ-P; Goodman, Ford, Simmons; Gatward, \& Meltzer, 2000), a 25-item screening measure of emotional and behavioral problems for children aged 3 to 17-years extensively used in Africa (Hoosen et al., 2018). The SDQ-P utilized a three-point Likert scale (0=not true; 1=somewhat true; 2= certainly true). Five subscales were derived from the measure including conduct problems, inattention-hyperactivity, emotional symptoms, peer problems, and prosocial behavior. A total score was calculated by summing the subscales with higher scores indicating more recognition of CAMH problems (range= 0 - 50).

Willingness to use accessible CAMH servicesup to 2 months

Caregivers' willingness to use accessible mental health service was adapted from a study examining child mental health service utilization among parents in rural Appalachia (S. L. Williams \& Polaha, 2014). Caregivers were asked "If my child experienced a mental health condition such as Dapo, Tola, and Moji \[fictional characters with depression, ADHD, and psychosis in a previously administered section\], I would take my child to see a healthcare provider at the mental health clinic for children and adolescents at UCH" (1 = Not at All, 6=Definitely).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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