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The mental health consequences of the COVID-19 (Coronavirus Disease of 2019) pandemic are likely to be vast, exceeding the capacity of mental health services and delaying treatment for people in need, with devastating consequences for those affected. Emerging data suggest that frontline health workers (e.g. physicians, nurses, emergency medical technicians) and essential workers (in industries such as energy, and food products and services) face particular risks for mental health problems during and after the COVID-19 outbreak. Additionally, our previous findings have shown that among these higher risk individuals, young adults and women reported greater levels of clinical symptoms.
To address the unprecedented mental health needs during and as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic this study will develop and test novel, cost-effective and scalable, digitally-delivered mental health interventions, and will test this approach by focusing on health care workers and other essential workers with an eye toward the young adult portion of this population.
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Stigma towards mental health care is a profound obstacle that interferes with individuals seeking these services. Research suggests that interventions that are based on social contact are the most efficient way to reduce stigma. A previous phase of this study also showed that participants of certain minority groups (Black participants and female participants) were more impacted by the intervention when it was delivered by a presenter who shared their demographic characteristics. By utilizing an online video intervention, this study aims to address stigma and empower essential workers (healthcare and non-healthcare workers) to seek treatment for mental health issues. As a secondary aim, this study will examine whether the intervention results in behavioral changes in help-seeking. The investigators will study this by adding a link to a database of mental health care providers and measuring the number of times participants click on the link. A total of 1,400 young adult members of these high-risk groups will be recruited to participate in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) testing the efficacy of the intervention.
The intervention will consist of brief videos in which empowered members of the respective high-risk group (presented by actors) share their COVID-19 related mental health problems and describe how they were able to confront their mental health problems, which in turn helped them seek mental health care. Within each high-risk group, individuals will first be randomized to receive either the video intervention, with content adjusted to the presenter's young adult, female, Latino identity, the intervention video without any identity-based content, or non-intervention control.
The study will randomize participants within each high-risk group into one of three arms:
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1,402 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Yuval Neria, PhD; Doron Amsalem, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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