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The Use of Nursing-students-led bCBTMI

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Internet Addiction
Interventions
Behavioral: bCBTMI
Behavioral: Control
Registration Number
NCT05897359
Lead Sponsor
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Brief Summary

The use of the internet is very popular in adolescence. Notwithstanding the benefits from the internet, many users are addicted to the internet and develop problematic behaviours which are regarded as "Internet addiction" (IA). Trained nursing students, who are the future nurses and well-equipped with basic health knowledge, as the interventionists to deliver a bCBTMI intervention to the eligible subjects. The result of this study is expected to provide evidence of the feasibility and effectiveness of training nursing students to conduct bCBTMI in Hong Kong Chinese adolescents with IA for a definitive RCT.

Detailed Description

A two-arm, parallel-group, feasibility cluster randomized controlled trial will be conducted. 60 adolescents with IA will be recruited from secondary schools in Hong Kong. Participants in the intervention group will receive 4 weekly 30-45 minute sessions using the brief CBT and the brief MI models by nursing students. Control group participants will receive routine care for IA.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria
  • Aged 13 to 17
  • Studying Forms 2 to 4
  • Classified as IA by the Chinese version of Young's 10-item Internet Addiction Test (IAT)
  • Can communicate in Cantonese and read Chinese.
Exclusion Criteria
  • With physical or cognitive impairment and learning problems as identified from the medical records

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
bCBTMIbCBTMIbCBTMI care for IA.
ControlControlRoutine care for IA.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Consent rateat the 6-month follow-up

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who consent to join the study by the number who are eligible.

Adverse eventsat the 6-month follow-up

Are defined as unfavorable and unintended events that are not present at baseline, or appear to have worsened during the study. The relation to the intervention will be assessed in accordance with the protocol for adverse events management (It can be provided upon request). The number and event severity will be recorded. Numbers and reasons for exclusions will be noted.

Attendance rateImmediately after the bCBTMI intervention

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who complete the intervention by those who are randomized.

Screening rateat day 1

Calculated as the number of students screened at participated secondary schools divided by number of students at participated schools during the recruitment period.

Eligibility rateat day 1

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who are eligible by the number who are screened.

Complete rateat the 6-month follow-up

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who returned questionnaires by the number of questionnaires distributed. This will be calculated by groups at baseline and each follow-up.

Missing dataat the 6-month follow-up

Calculated as the percentage of missing values in the dataset. Unknown or blank values will be considered missing values.

Randomization rateat day 1

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who are randomized into intervention and control groups by those who provide consent.

Retention rateat the 6-month follow-up

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who remain in the study by those who are randomized. Retention rates for the intervention and control groups will be calculated at each follow-up.

Adherence to intervention protocolat the 1-month follow-up

Calculated by dividing the number of secondary school students who follow the intervention protocol by those who are randomized.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-reported abstinence at the 3-month follow-upat the 3-month follow-up

Measured by the number of IA symptoms via a self-reported questionnaire.

Self-reported abstinence at the 6-month follow-upat the 6-month follow-up

Measured by the number of IA symptoms via a self-reported questionnaire.

The Chinese version of Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale for Children (CES-DC)at the 6-month follow-up

CES-DC will be used to record the number of depression symptoms in secondary schools students with IA at each follow-up. It includes 20 items asking on a 4-point Likert scale in relation to the incidence of the stated symptoms during the previous week, and are scored from 0 to 3 (0 = not at all, 3 = a lot). Total scores range from 0 to 60, with higher scores indicating greater number of depressive symptoms. This questionnaire has been empirically tested and validated in Hong Kong children and are currently using in Youth Quitline.

Anxiety levelat the 6-month follow-up

The anxiety level of secondary school students with IA will be measured by the short form of the Chinese Version of the State Anxiety Scale for Children (CSAS-C) at each follow-up. It has 10 itmes with scores from 1 to 3. Total scores range from 10 to 30, with higher scores indicating a higher level of anxiety. This questionnaire has been empirically tested and validated in Hong Kong children.

Self-reported abstinence at the 1-week follow-upat the 1-week follow-up

Measured by the number of IA symptoms via a self-reported questionnaire.

Self-reported abstinence at the 1-month follow-upat the 1-month follow-up

Measured by the number of IA symptoms via a self-reported questionnaire.

Sleep quality of secondary schools students with IA will be assessed using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI)at the 6-month follow-up

It contains 19 items measuring 7 domains: subjective sleep quality, latency, duration, habitual efficiency, disturbances, use of medication, and daytime dysfunction on a 3-point scale (0: no difficulty to 3: severe difficulty) except for the items reporting bedtime and time awake. The sum of the seven component scores produces a global score with higher scores represent poorer subjective sleep quality. It has been validated in Hong Kong children and adolescents previously.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Katherine Lam

🇭🇰

Hong Kong, Hong Kong,China, Hong Kong

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