Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Purpose: The purpose of this research is to pilot test a novel, alternative, potentially sustainable system of teacher-delivered, task-shifted child mental health care.
Participants: ~300 estimated
Procedures: This is a RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) guided, mixed methods, clustered evaluation of Tealeaf-NC's Reach, Adoption & Implementation (Primary Outcomes, implementation-based), as well as evaluating for preliminary indicators of Effectiveness & Maintenance (Secondary Outcomes, clinically-based).
Full description
Addressing children's mental health is a critically important health challenge. Twenty percent of all children suffer from significant mental health concerns, most of whom will remain unrecognized, unsupported, and affected throughout their lives. Such wide differences between mental health needs and care access are often called the "care gap". More recently, a youth mental health crisis emerged alongside the COVID-19 pandemic. The adverse impact of the pandemic has led to youth mental health prevalence increasing up to 40% in some global regions, which is double the pre-pandemic rate, while available professional mental health human resources have not changed, leading to an even wider care gap. As urgent solutions are needed, alternative systems of care and support may address this urgent need in a more timely fashion than expanding traditional care systems would.
The overarching goal of this study is to address the youth mental health crisis by providing evidence that high-quality, alternative, sustainable child mental health care may improve youth mental health symptoms. This proposal aims to pilot a novel, alternative, potentially sustainable system of teacher-delivered, task-shifted child mental health care. In North Carolina, USA, the investigators will pilot Teachers Leading the Frontlines - Mansik Swastha [Mental Health in Nepali] (Tealeaf). Created in Darjeeling, India, Tealeaf centers on training and supervising elementary school teachers to deliver "education as mental health therapy" (Ed-MH) to children (ages 5-12). Ed-MH is the investigators' novel, task-shifting, therapy modality that minimizes the time teachers need to deliver care by fitting it into their work. In Ed-MH, teachers use evidence-based therapeutic techniques adapted for use in their existing interactions with students in need (e.g., while teaching) and streamlined for care for any diagnosis ("transdiagnostic").
The investigators' rationale stems from two trials in Darjeeling where the mental health symptoms of children in Tealeaf improved from clinical to neurotypical. The investigators specifically aim to determine if teachers can deliver Tealeaf with fidelity, with positive acceptability & feasibility for stakeholders, and leading to preliminary indicators of improved child mental health outcomes. Guided by the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) public health framework, the investigators hypothesize that a pilot of Tealeaf clustered at the school level will show that:
Researchers will compare Tealeaf with an active comparator, RE-SEED (Responding to Students' Emotions through Education), to see if a lower-resourced version of Tealeaf is viable and/or has an impact.
Tealeaf has six components implemented over a school year:
For RE-SEED (active comparator), processes are similar to Tealeaf. The differences are that training is 1-day such that they receive markedly less in-depth knowledge, and the study team does not provide supervision, allowing only the counselor to provide supervision. This less resource-intensive approach will allow for an ethical comparator to Tealeaf, where schools would like for teachers to have some skills to support identified students as part of their willingness to participate in research, while also allowing the investigators to begin to understand what impact fewer resources may have versus a full intervention.
Tealeaf and Ed-MH's mechanism of action for improving mental health symptoms is through teachers guiding children to consistently practice coping skills and emotion regulation for long periods (a school day) and in real-time (in moments of concern). Like counselors, Tealeaf teachers help students gain insight and acquire coping skills. Teachers take the therapy activities further, though, by overseeing children practicing coping skills, reinforcing positive behavior, and supporting them in moments of struggle, all in real-time. It is ideally how teachers would work with students as guided by a therapist, but here they determine how to therapeutically respond to a student's mental health needs since therapists are inaccessible. Moreover, as a role model, teachers already play a key role in the social, emotional, and academic development of students and interact with them individually in moments of concern. Ed-MH allows teachers to deliver therapy in shared moments, in real time. Professional and lay counselors, instead, can only reflect from afar on moments the student is willing to share in the office.
A second mechanism of action is through teachers delivering care that can target education symptoms of mental health as seen in India. For example, a student may have poor schoolwork due to anxiety. Their teacher can target their poor schoolwork (the education symptoms of their mental health) and anxiety by improving schoolwork quality (an education intervention) by building their capacity to complete assignments gradually, i.e. exposure therapy (an evidence-based technique). After care, both symptoms improved.
Intervention evidence: Results from 2018 and 2019 pilot Tealeaf trials show that mental health care delivery for children can be shifted to teachers.
Overall, our prior research demonstrates that teacher-delivered transdiagnostic mental health care (Tealeaf inclusive of Ed-MH) may be a potentially efficient, sustainable, and impactful approach. A Type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation Tealeaf trial is ongoing in Darjeeling, India.
The investigators' rationale for pilot testing Tealeaf-NC is based on Tealeaf's promising results as there is an urgent need to identify and deliver evidence-based children's mental health interventions to tackle the children's mental health care gap that worsened into a crisis during the COVID pandemic. Of note, Tealeaf skipped over efficacy (lab-like setting) to effectiveness testing (real world), as literature supports skipping efficacy testing of task-shifted mental health care. Task-shifting improves mental health outcomes in lab-like settings and is now recommended to be tested in specific forms (e.g., teacher-delivery) for specific contexts to study its effects in real-world practice. As research evidence takes an average of 17 years to reach clinical practice, and given Tealeaf's promise, the urgent need justifies pilot testing Tealeaf's potential implementation and clinical outcomes in new settings.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Schools:
Principals:
Teachers:
Counselors:
Students:
Guardians:
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
312 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Christina Cruz, MD; Michael Matergia, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal