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At the Psychiatric Hospital, there are limited mental health professionals to offer the standard of care that is expected at a psychiatric institution. Psychotherapy is most affected. However, there are mental health professionals in training and long waiting times before clients are seen, which provides an opportunity for an intervention to be carried out. The purpose of the study therefore, is to determine whether a group psychological intervention can primarily reduce self-stigma among outpatients at the Psychiatric Hospital. The intervention's effects on self-efficacy and quality of life will also be assessed.
Full description
Study population: outpatients in the Outpatient Department at The Psychiatric Hospital
Target population: clients with two-weekly appointments
Procedures for recruitment and consent
Participants will be chosen using available lists of persons who come to clinic on a two-weekly basis on four(4) days of the week (every day except the day the Principal Investigator is responsible for conducting clinic), for two consecutive weeks. Twenty-six will be chosen each day (for eight (8) days) and randomized to intervention and treatment-as-usual (Thirteen (13) persons to each group). Participants will be selected based on the inclusion and exclusion criteria and consent will be obtained.
Randomization will be carried out by Stata 14
Sample size
Using the means and standard deviations for the Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness Inventory (ISMI) used in a randomized controlled trial and Stata 14 for sample size calculation, the sample size recommended is eighty-four (84) with forty-two (42) per group. This will give a power (for the study) of eighty per cent (80%).
However, the aim will be two-hundred and eight (208) clients based on the following:
Method
There will be six (6) sessions covering six (6) topics. One topic will be covered at each session. Sessions will last sixty (60) to ninety (90) minutes.
Data collection
Permission was obtained from producer of ISMI. WHO5 Well-Being Index is free to use and General self-efficacy scale does not require permission, once referenced.
All three scales have been found to be valid and reliable.
Questionnaires and scales will be identified using participants' record numbers to facilitate verification of information such as whether medications or health care provider changed during the course of the intervention.
Statistical analyses
Intention to treat analysis will be used.
Questionnaires kept in secure room for at least five (5) years
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52 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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