Randomized Trial of a Transdiagnostic, Cognitive and Behavioral Intervention Versus Treatment as Usual in School-aged Children With Emotional and Behavioral Disturbances
Overview
- Phase
- N/A
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Anxiety
- Sponsor
- Mental Health Services in the Capital Region, Denmark
- Enrollment
- 396
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- The child's impact of mental health problems reported by the parent on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 6 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Background
Impairing emotional and behavioural problems are common in children and adolescents and mark a three-fold increased risk of mental disorder in young adulthood. Evidence-based psychological interventions are recommended for indicated prevention and first-line treatment, but access to treatment is often limited.
A new, modular cognitive and behavioural therapy program Mind My Mind (MMM) comprising evidence-based interventions for children with emotional and behavioral problems was designed to be delivered by educational psychologists in the Danish municipalities.
A feasibility RCT (NCT03448809), demonstrated that the study design was acceptable among children, parents, and therapists, and it provided data to estimate the sample size needed for the definitive RCT. The investigators test the hypothesis that the parent-reported impact of mental health problems will be significantly lower for children in the MMM group as compared with children in the TAU group after the 18-week intervention period (primary hypothesis), and after follow-up at week 26 (first secondary hypothesis).
Aim
To investigate the effects and cost-effectiveness of MMM compared with TAU for children and adolescents with impairing anxiety, depressive symptoms and/or behavioral problems. Both beneficial and harmful effects are evaluated.
Methods
The study compares the new modular MMM with TAU for children aged 6-16 years with anxiety, depressive symptoms or behavioral problems impacting on their daily and social life. The trial is conducted in four Danish municipalities in the period from September 2017 to April 2019. Participants are children with indicated needs.
The parents sign up the child for assessment in the Pedagogical Psychological Services in the Municipalities. The assessment includes web-based standardized questionnaires for child and parent: 1) the strengths and difficulties questionnaire (SDQ), 2) Spence Children's Anxiety Scale, 3) Mood and Feelings Questionnaire, and 4) family, social and school functioning. The questionnaires are supplemented with a clinical psychopathological interview by a trained psychologist. The investigators exclude children with 1) low levels of problems and no indicated needs, or 2) high levels of problems and need of referral to the Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
412 children will be included and randomized (1:1) to MMM versus TAU. MMM is supported by a central organization, who is responsible for the education and weekly supervision of the therapists, and the web-based data collection and feedback of data in real time to therapists and researchers. All outcomes are self-, parent- and teacher-reported scores on standardized questionnaires administered at baseline, week 18 and week 26. At entry, the child and the parents own description of the Top-problem is recorded and scored on a 10-point likert scale. The Top-problem and impact of problem is scored by parent and child every second week during the intervention period, and the progress is monitored by the therapists in the MMM group. Information on costs is gathered through administrative registers and questionnaires at baseline, week 18, and week 26.
Primary objectives and outcome measures
This primary outcome is measured with the parent-reported SDQ impact-scale. The minimum relevant difference in impact of mental health problems was set at 1.0 corresponding to a change from severe to moderate, or from moderate to little-or-no impact in one of five domains of child's life: distress, home-life, friendships, classroom learning and leisure activities.
Secondary objectives and outcomes measures
The key secondary hypotheses are that the children in the MMM group will show significantly lower levels of parent-reported anxiety, depressive symptoms, functional impairment, Top-problems and behavioural problems, and better school attendance and quality-of-life as compared with the children in the TAU group at week 18.
All other outcomes are explored at week 18 and 26, including the primary and secondary measures of potential harm: 1) youths with severe and increased levels of self-reported suicidality, hopelessness and/or negative self-evaluation, and 2) youths with poor quality of life in relation to family, free time and friends.
Statistical analyses
All analyses will be intention-to-treat with two-sided significance tests. The investigators will use mixed models with repeated measures for continuous outcomes and generalized linear mixed model for binary and non-normally distributed outcomes. For the key secondary outcomes, the investigators will use the strategy of hierarchical testing allowing us to preserve the level of significance, α=0.05, as long as the null hypotheses are rejected. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratio will be calculated to analyze cost-effectiveness.
Perspectives
The results will guide policy makers in deciding whether to implement modular CBT-programs like the MMM.
Investigators
Pia Jeppesen
Ph.D., Senior Researcher, Specialist in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Associate Professor, Institute for Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Mental Health Services in the Capital Region, Denmark
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Aged 6-16 years and in 0-9th grade (excluding the second semester of the 9th grade).
- •SDQ scores reported by the parent are above the lower cutoff: a total difficulties score of ≥14 and/or emotional problems ≥5, and/or conduct score ≥3; combined with a functional impairment score of ≥
- •Scores above this cutoff place the child's difficulties within the top 10 percent of mental health problems in the general age-matched population in Denmark.
- •The child and parents determine one top problem that has to fall within the domains of anxiety, depressive symptoms or behavioral problems, according to the classification by the PPR (Pedagogical Psychological Services in the Municipalities) psychologist.
- •The child and at least one of the two parents understand and speak Danish sufficiently to participate in the treatment.
- •Written informed consent from the holders of the parental rights and responsibilities (usually both parents).
Exclusion Criteria
- •Indications that the child may have a severe mental disorder like autism spectrum disorder, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, schizophrenia-like psychosis, an eating disorder, severe obsessive-compulsive disorder, repeated self-harm, abuse or dependence of alcohol or psychoactive drugs or other mental disorder requiring referral to a more intensive assessment or treatment in child and adolescent mental health services (after systematic assessment and according to the usual recommendations and guidelines).
- •Indications of intellectual functional impairment, severe learning difficulties or other special needs that would interfere negatively with the MMM training. The judgment is made as a best estimate by the PPR psychologist on the basis of the available information. A formal intelligence test is not required.
- •A prior diagnosis of any developmental or mental disorder after assessment by the regional child and adolescent psychiatry, regardless of present status or treatment. A prior examination that did not result in a diagnosis of any specific mental health disorder will not exclude the child. The PPR psychologist must consult the PI who decides whether there is sufficient information to exclude the child because of a prior psychiatric history.
- •Prior participation in the MMM pilot or current study.
- •The child and/or parents are unable to participate in weekly sessions throughout the next 13-18 weeks.
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
The child's impact of mental health problems reported by the parent on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)
Time Frame: Week 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 26
SDQ contains 25 items, each scored on a 3-point Likert scale (0, 1, 2), and divided into five sub-scales measuring emotional problems, behavioral problems, hyperactivity, peer problems and pro-social behavior. The total difficulties scale (range 0-40) sums up the difficulties across the first four problem areas. The extended version of the SDQ includes questions about child distress and interference of problems with home-life, friendships, classroom learning and leisure activities, and scores sum up the distress and the interference of problems on the impact scale (range 0-10). The minimum relevant difference in impact of mental health problems was set at 1.0 corresponding to a change from severe to moderate, or from moderate to little-or-no impact in one of the five domains of child's life. This primary outcome is measured with the parent-reported SDQ impact-scale (range 0-10) and analyzed in a mixed model with repeated measures adjusting for the stratification variables.
Secondary Outcomes
- Top-problem scores, parent-reported(Week 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 26)
- Parental Stress Scale (PSS)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- The teacher-reported impact of mental health problems (SDQ)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Self-reported anxiety reported (SCAS, only children of age ≥ 8 years)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Child' anxiety reported by the parent on 'Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Child's depressive symptoms reported by the parent on the Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (MFQ)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- School attendance(Week 18 and 26)
- Self-reported depressive symptoms (MFQ, only children of age ≥ 8 years)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Self-reported Top-problem scores(Week 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 26)
- Self-reported emotional and behavioural difficulties (SDQ, only children of age ≥ 11 years)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- The primary measures of potential harms(Week 18 and 26)
- Weiss Functional impairment rating Scale (WFIRS)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Teacher-reported emotional and behavioural difficulties (SDQ)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- The self-reported Experience of Service Questionnaire (ESQ)(Week 18 and 26)
- The secondary measures of potential harm(Week 18 and 26)
- The self-reported physical and psychological well-being (two subscales from the KIDSCREEN).(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- The child's behavioural problems, reported by the parent on the Eyberg Child Behaviour Inventory (ECBI)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Total emotional and behavioural difficulties, reported by parents (SDQ)(Week 0, 18 and 26.)
- The self-reported impact of mental health problems (SDQ, only children of age ≥ 11 years)(Week 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 26)
- The parent-reported Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) of their child (KIDSCREEN)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- The parent-reported Experience of Service Questionnaire (ESQ)(Week 18 and 26)
- Parents' absence from work(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER)(Week 26)
- The parent- and child-reported Child Health Utility 9D (CHU9D)(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Treatment and support received by the child and the family(Week 0, 18 and 26)
- Costs(Week 26)