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Clinical Trials/NCT03656770
NCT03656770
Completed
Not Applicable

Measuring Beliefs and Norms About Persons With Mental Illness in Rural Uganda: A Randomized Survey Experiment

Massachusetts General Hospital1 site in 1 country1,782 target enrollmentDecember 13, 2016

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Mental Illness
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Enrollment
1782
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Social Distance
Status
Completed
Last Updated
6 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Survey experiment to estimate drivers of mental illness stigma

Detailed Description

Despite significant advances in scientific understanding of brain and substance use disorders accompanied by significant advances in treatment and improvements in prognosis, mental illness remains highly stigmatized throughout the world. Previous studies suggest that portraying mental illness as treatable can reduce negative attitudes toward persons with mental illness. This randomized controlled trial compares the effects of exposing study participants to vignettes portraying persons with untreated and symptomatic mental illness vs. treated mental illness with complete response vs. treated mental illness with relapse. It is hypothesized, based on prior work, that study participants exposed to vignettes depicting treated mental illness with completed response would have the greatest effect on reducing negative attitudes toward persons with mental illness, followed by treated mental illness with relapse and untreated and symptomatic mental illness.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
December 13, 2016
End Date
June 8, 2018
Last Updated
6 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Alexander Tsai

Associate Professor of Psychiatry

Massachusetts General Hospital

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • all persons who considered Nyakabare Parish their primary place of residence and who were capable of providing consent

Exclusion Criteria

  • minors younger than 18 years of age, with the exception of emancipated minors
  • persons who did not consider Nyakabare their primary place of residence, e.g., persons who happened to be visiting Nyakabare at the time of the survey or who owned a home in Nyakabare but spent most of their time outside the parish
  • persons with whom research staff could not communicate, e.g., due to deafness, mutism, or aphasia
  • persons with psychosis, neurological damage, acute intoxication, or other cognitive impairment (all of which were determined informally in the field by non-clinical research staff in consultation with a supervisor)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Social Distance

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Willingness to have the woman portrayed in the vignette to marry into the study participant's family (single item culturally adapted instrument developed specifically for this study)

Perceived Norms about Social Distance

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Study participant's perception of the extent to which other people would be willing to have the woman portrayed in the vignette to marry into their families (single item culturally adapted instrument developed specifically for this study)

Negative Attitudes (Attribution)

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Personal belief that the symptoms of the woman portrayed in the vignette represent divine punishment (single item culturally adapted instrument developed specifically for this study)

Perceived Norms about Negative Attitudes (Attribution)

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Study participant's perception of the extent to which other people believe that the symptoms of the woman portrayed in the vignette represent divine punishment (single item culturally adapted instrument developed specifically for this study)

Negative Attitudes (Shame)

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Personal belief that the symptoms of the woman portrayed in the vignette bring shame upon her family

Perceived Norms about Negative Attitudes (Shame)

Time Frame: Immediate (assessed with respect to the study participant's beliefs at a single time point, which is the time at which the survey is administered)

Study participant's perception of the extent to which other people believe that the symptoms of the woman portrayed in the vignette bring shame upon her family (single item culturally adapted instrument developed specifically for this study)

Study Sites (1)

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