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WeRISE: Youth-led Mental Health Transformation Through Cultivating Gratitude, Kindness, and Hope

C

citiesRISE

Status

Completed

Conditions

Youth Mental Health

Treatments

Behavioral: The [adapted] Stan Kutcher Teen Mental Health (TMH) program
Behavioral: weRISE; The gratitude, kindness and hope (GKH) program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05944263
TWCF0631

Details and patient eligibility

About

The weRISE study's primary aim is to develop and test the effects of an arts-based train-the-trainer intervention developed to cultivate gratitude, kindness, and hope among youth in schools and informal settlements in both India and Kenya, on mental health and well-being outcomes. The core theory of change for weRISE is that through cultivating these key strengths, youth will undergo empowering mindset shifts that equip them to navigate past, present, and future life challenges, including mental ill-health.

Through a cross-country, phased, cluster randomized controlled design, this study will explore the question: what impacts the weRISE intervention has on gratitude, kindness, hope compared with a standard mental health literacy intervention. The investigators will also assess the impacts of weRISE on secondary outcomes such as self-efficacy, the feasibility of the youth-led delivery model, and whether impacts differ depending on setting (schools versus informal settlements, India versus Kenya). The investigators hypothesize that the weRISE intervention will result in greater improvements in mental health and well-being outcomes for youth recipients compared with a standard mental health literacy intervention, and that there will be strong positive relationships between gratitude, kindness, hope, and the mental health and well-being outcomes. The investigators hypothesize that the effects of weRISE will be similar across settings (schools and informal settlements in India and Kenya) and that the youth-led train-the-trainer model will prove effective.

Through this project, investigators will work together with leading experts and youth to develop an overall intervention model, contextualize it for India and Kenya respectively, and package a set of implementation tools for weRISE. Importantly, investigators plan to iterate on the content developed and contextualized for India and Kenya and publish a youth-targeted weRISE guide that will provide any young person anywhere with content and concrete activities. The investigators will also develop a series of academic outputs including scientific articles and conference presentations to disseminate evidence and lessons learned. Finally, the investigators will produce and disseminate a policy brief to facilitate uptake and scaling of weRISE by government officials and other decision-makers.

Full description

The adolescent years for young people is a period of crucial life transitions and is fraught with a range of internal and external challenges. Young people in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are particularly vulnerable to mental ill health given the exposure to multiple adverse life experiences. Positive psychological interventions have been brought into the social-emotional learning curriculum of western countries and has shown efficacy in supporting the salutary effects of the same in the health and wellbeing of the young people. In most LMICs, where there is less access to psychologists and psychiatrists, the models that are used have only a limited amount of application to the young people who are struggling.

The primary goal of this project is to design and test the effects on mental health and well-being outcomes of an arts-based train-the-trainer intervention, cultivating gratitude, kindness, and hope among youth in schools and informal settlements. The central change theory is that by cultivating these key strengths, youth will experience empowering mind-set shifts that will prepare them to navigate past, present, and future life challenges, including mental illness.

In order to create a robustly tested, adaptable, and scalable intervention that speaks directly to the realities of young people in schools and informal settlements in LMICs, this project will integrate the research currently available in the fields of character development, positive psychology, and mental health. This project will support cross-border collaboration in a number of ways to successfully bridge these rich and diverse sectors. It will bring together specialists from LMICs and high-income countries (HICs), mental health and character development professionals, as well as youth and adult researchers, to produce the fundamental evidence at the nexus of character development and health outcomes.

This project will use a single-blind cluster randomized controlled trial design with 10 clusters 60 young people within schools and 30 in communities recruited from informal settlements in Nairobi and India. The evaluation will employ a mixed methods approach to determine the impact of the intervention on mental wellbeing of young people. Quantitative data will be collected through a survey at baseline and end-line while focus group discussions (FGD) will only be conducted at end-line. These will be analyzed using STATA and NVivo softwares respectively.

This project proposes that, the model and evidence generated will be innovative in a number of ways: 1) it is designed to scale in low-resource settings and takes replicability into account from the start. 2) the intervention's accessibility to a diverse range of youth in LMICs, including the most marginalized, is considered from the start; 3) it departs from the traditional approach of testing interventions based on individual character strengths in order to weave gratitude, kindness, and hope together through an integrated life course (past, present, and future) approach and; 4) the focus is on young people's leadership and their ability to support themselves and their peers. Character strengthening is associated with independent critical thinking inherently required in developing leaders. While this is not an outcome of the study the ability to lead oneself and others with compassion signifies likelihood of a longer-term impact of the character strengthening intervention. Findings from the study would contribute towards improving mental health policies and programs.

Enrollment

840 patients

Sex

All

Ages

12 to 14 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria for adolescents in community clusters

  • Adolescents between the ages of 12-14 will be recruited in the community matching the demographic of the and living within 5 kilometers of the community-based organization will be recruited
  • Parents in the community consent and the adolescent's assent to participate in the program at the community-based organization

Inclusion criteria for adolescents in school clusters

  • Students in grade 7-9 in schools that are demographically similar to the community clusters.
  • Participating schools and parents in schools provide consent and the adolescents assent to participate in the program at the schools

Inclusion criteria for youth trainers

  • Youth trainers should be between the ages 18-24
  • Youth trainers' who consent to participate in the program

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Young people with forms of disabilities (e.g. sight, intellectual) that make it hard for them to meaningfully participate in the programs will be excluded.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

840 participants in 2 patient groups

The gratitude, kindness and hope (GKH) program
Experimental group
Description:
This gratitude, kindness and hope (GKH) program will be a structured manual-based intervention that has been adapted and contextualized from the previous work that has been done in this field. Each intervention session will be conducted in the school and community settings by 2 youth trainers aged 18 - 24 and who will be trained in the delivery of the intervention. The sessions will be held twice a week, concurrently in schools and in the community. Fifty per cent of the sessions will be supervised by master trainers (who are experts in charge of training the youth trainers on the intervention). The rest of the sessions will be audio-recorded and reviewed randomly during supervision meetings. The total duration of each session will be 45 minutes distributed as shown below: iv. 5 minutes warm up activity v. 30 minutes practice and explanation of concepts through interactive activities and discussions vi. 10 mins answering questions and designing homework
Treatment:
Behavioral: weRISE; The gratitude, kindness and hope (GKH) program
The [adapted] Stan Kutcher Teen Mental Health (TMH) program
Active Comparator group
Description:
The program delivered to the control group is adapted from the Stan Kutcher Teen Mental Health Curriculum. It was initially developed to help enhance the mental health literacy of students and was developed for ages 13 to 15 years which was further adapted for a slightly lower age group (12-14 yrs) as that targeted in this study through simplification of terminologies to ensure age-appropriate content. Just like the GKH program, the TMH sessions will be delivered by 2 trained youth trainers in the school and community settings. The program will be delivered over 8 sessions, two sessions a week (i.e. over a span of 4 weeks). Half of the sessions will be supervised by master trainers. Like the GKH program, each session will go for 45 minutes each .
Treatment:
Behavioral: The [adapted] Stan Kutcher Teen Mental Health (TMH) program

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Austin Walker, BA; Frederic Azariah, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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