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Exploring the Effectiveness of the 'Back of the Net' Intervention on Indices of Physical and Psychological Measures (BTN)

D

Dublin City University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Self Concept
Body Fat Composition
Perceived Social Support
Depression

Treatments

Behavioral: Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Other: Exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00971217
REC/2009/096

Details and patient eligibility

About

To date very little research has focused on the mental health of young men. The main aim of the proposed research is to explore the effectiveness of a combined exercise and internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) intervention (called "Back of the Net") on indices of suicide risk in young men. A second aim is to explore the relationship between physical self-concept, self esteem, body fat composition, body circumference and changes in depression as a result of an exercise intervention. It is hypothesised that the combined exercise and internet-delivered CBT intervention will have greater benefits for indices of suicide risk compared to an exercise-only intervention, an internet-delivered CBT-only intervention and a control condition.

Full description

The increase in the number of young people, particularly males, taking their own lives in Ireland has become a major cause for concern. Five times more men than women end their own lives in Ireland today. Research shows that young people, particularly men under 30 years are far less likely to attend their GP than adults aged over 30 years. Thus, young men who are suffering from depression and who are vulnerable to suicidal behaviour are not actively seeking the help they require. Young men are the group least likely to approach mental health services (Russell, Gaffney, Bergin & Bedford, 2004), despite suicide and depression being so prevalent among young Irish males. It is clear that approaches to suicide prevention in Irish society need to bridge the gap between young at-risk men and mental health services.

Research has shown that both psychotherapeutic interventions such as Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and exercise interventions can be equally effective as pharmacotherapy in addressing some of the risk factors associated with suicide (Mead et al., 2008), including symptoms of depression. Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT) places emphasis on identifying and changing maladaptive beliefs and behaviours that contribute to emotional distress. CBT techniques aim to enhance self-control, rational problem-solving abilities and social skills; it is therefore unsurprising that CBT has proven to be beneficial in addressing indices of suicide risk such as depression and perceived social isolation (Barbe, Bridge, Birhamer, Kolko & Brent, 2004; Brown at al., 2005). In an attempt to make CBT more widely available and easily accessible to various populations, research groups are investigating the impact of internet delivered CBT programmes on indices of suicide risk, including depression. Internet delivered CBT programmes have been found to be as effective as face-to-face treatment (Anderson, 2009). Internet delivered CBT has been shown to significantly reduce levels of depression in young people living in Sweden (Anderson, Bergstrom, Hollandare et al., 2005). Research proposes that internet-based interventions represent a paradigm shift in treatment techniques and that internet delivered CBT should be pursued further as a treatment alternative for symptoms of depression (Anderson, 2009; Anderson et al., 2005).

There is a large body of research that supports the role of exercise in treating depressive symptoms. Both depression and feelings of hopelessness, principal indices of suicide, are found to be lower in adults who regularly engage in exercise compared to those who remain sedentary (Chioqueta & Stiles, 2007). In a study involving university students, Chioqueta and Stiles (2007) demonstrate that active engagement in physical activity was significantly associated with improvements in indices of suicide. Involvement in physical activity has been shown to produce positive mood states and subjective well-being as well as reducing stress levels (Fox, 1999).

Suicide prevention in Ireland requires an innovative approach, one that provides support and is easily accessible by young men and which promotes help-seeking behaviour and mental health awareness. It is possible that internet based CBT interventions present such an opportunity for delivering mental health promotion and encouraging help-seeking behaviour among young Irish men while reducing indices of suicide risk. Exercise interventions are similarly successful in reducing the risk factors associated with suicide in young men, such as severity of depressive symptoms. Thus the main aim of this study is to explore the effectiveness of a combined exercise and internet delivered CBT intervention in reducing indices of suicide in young men.

In addition, it has been suggested that Physical Self-Concept mediates the relationship between exercise and self-esteem which is in turn related to depression (Dishman, Hales, Ward et al., 2006). However the relationship between these variables over time as a result of an intervention has not yet been studied. Therefore a secondary aim of this present study is to explore the relationship between physical self-concept, self-esteem and depression throughout the duration of the proposed intervention. We will also examine if changes in body-fat composition and body circumference mediate the relationship between these variables.

Enrollment

140 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy males aged 18-40 years
  • Available twice a week for 10 weeks and willing to participate in moderate intensity exercise for 50 minutes at each session
  • Not regularly physically active (i.e., engages in a structured exercise session once or less per week)
  • Willing to participate in the internet-based CBT intervention once per week for 10 weeks

Exclusion criteria

  • Current illness or history of clinical conditions that prevents participation in exercise
  • Currently alcohol/drug abusing
  • Major cognitive or psychiatric impairments
  • Currently receiving medication for major psychiatric disorders, including depression

Trial design

140 participants in 4 patient groups

Exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will engage in 2 exercise sessions each week for 10 weeks. Each session will last 50 minutes and will commence with a 5 minute warm up on the bike or treadmill and conclude with a 5 minute cool down. The participants will be required to exercise on their own without interference from others. Participants will wear heart rate monitors to ensure that they are exercising to moderate intensity (70-80% of age predicted maximum heart rate). Exercise: Aerobic exercise on the bike/cross trainer/ rower/ treadmill and resistance exercise on the weights machines.
Treatment:
Other: Exercise
Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will be asked to log-on to a web-site specifically aimed at young men once per week and complete the set cognitive-behavioural tasks.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Combined Exercise/Online CBT
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will simultaneously par-take in both the exercise and the online CBT conditions already outlined.
Treatment:
Other: Exercise
Behavioral: Online Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Individuals will be advised that the start of their intervention will be delayed by 10 weeks. After 10 weeks individuals in the control condition will be given the opportunity to avail of an induction session in the gym and subsequently use the gym facilities for three sessions if they so desire. Participants will be asked to refrain from exercise for the 10 week study period.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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