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Engaging Black Youth in Depression and Suicide Prevention Treatment Within Urban Schools

New York University (NYU) logo

New York University (NYU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Suicidal Ideation
Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: IPT-A
Behavioral: Making Connections Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03940508
1R34MH119290-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Completing evidence-based treatments for depression has been shown to be particularly problematic for Black adolescents. If Black adolescents' depression treatment needs are to be met, the engagement challenges and the factors that lessen the success of treatment in the "real world" must be addressed. The investigators will examine the effectiveness of the Making Connections Intervention (MCI) and investigate key mediators of both engagement and response to treatment for depression. The MCI is a 1-2 session, evidence-based intervention designed to improve engagement, perceived relevance, and treatment satisfaction among depressed, Black adolescents. The study also uses tailored outreach strategies for adolescents and parents by including innovative digital content such as a web page/app along with other digital products.

This study will address an important public health issue: How best to connect Black adolescents with depression to treatment in clinically meaningful ways, and how best to deliver evidence-based treatment to them through school-based services.

Full description

Completing evidence-based treatments for depression has been shown to be particularly problematic for Black adolescents. Their rates of participation in treatments for depression are lower due to negative perceptions of services and providers, and their reluctance to acknowledge the presence of symptoms.

If Black adolescents' depression treatment needs are to be met, the engagement challenges and the factors that lessen the success of treatment in the "real world" must be addressed. This research examines the effectiveness of the Making Connections Intervention (MCI) and investigates key mediators of both engagement and response to treatment for depression. The MCI is a 1-2 session, evidence-based intervention designed to improve engagement, perceived relevance, and treatment satisfaction among depressed, Black adolescents. The study also uses tailored outreach strategies for adolescents and parents by including innovative digital content such as a web page/app along with other digital products.

The investigators previously performed a small pilot study that used the MCI as an add-on to the IPT-A, an evidence-based intervention for depression delivered in schools typically over 12 sessions. The results suggested that MCI has a positive impact on many aspects of change associated with treatment engagement and clinical outcomes.

This study will be a randomized controlled trial. It will examine the effectiveness of the MCI in a multi-school trial involving adolescents in grades 6-12 who attend New York City (NYC) Department of Education (DOE) Public Schools. The investigators will randomly assign 60 Black students with depression symptoms to two conditions: MCI+IPT-A vs. IPT-A-alone. The investigators will also do qualitative research, like interviews, before the digital content is created. This will enhance the relevance of the MCI. The main outcomes are adolescent-and caregiver-level engagement and adolescent depression. Suicidal ideation is a secondary outcome. This study will also test related factors, like adolescent helping-seeking behavior and parental knowledge of mental health services, that can account for treatment outcomes and that will allow the MCI to be strengthened in future roll-outs of the intervention in school settings.

Enrollment

29 patients

Sex

All

Ages

12 to 20 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Must identify as Black and/or African American
  2. Must be enrolled in grades 6-12 (except 12th graders in their last semester)
  3. Must be able to speak English
  4. Must have received caregiver consent and have assented to participate
  5. Must meet depression and global functioning levels indicated by a CES-D score ≥16, a Hamilton Rating Scale of Depression (HRSD) Score ≥ 10, and a Global Assessment Scale for Children (C-GAS) score ≤ 65 at baseline
  6. Students who are currently on a stable dose of anti-depressant medication, but still meet inclusion criteria, can be enrolled in the study.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Actively suicidal with intent or plan
  2. Intellectually disabled
  3. Have a life threatening medical illness
  4. Have a current primary substance abuse diagnosis in the moderate to severe range, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, any evidence of psychosis, a primary diagnosis of anorexia
  5. Currently in active treatment for depression (excluding medication) at baseline assessment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

29 participants in 2 patient groups

MCI + IPT-A
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive the Making Connections Intervention (MCI) in addition to IPT-A for depression.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Making Connections Intervention
Behavioral: IPT-A
IPT-A Only
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants will receive IPT-A for depression.
Treatment:
Behavioral: IPT-A

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Michael A Lindsey, PhD; Tracy M Grogan, MS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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