| Literature DB >> 26231225 |
Kelsey Hegarty1, Laura Tarzia2, Elizabeth Murray3, Jodie Valpied4, Cathy Humphreys5, Angela Taft6, Lisa Gold7, Nancy Glass8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Domestic violence is a serious problem affecting the health and wellbeing of women globally. Interventions in health care settings have primarily focused on screening and referral, however, women often may not disclose abuse to health practitioners. The internet offers a confidential space in which women can assess the health of their relationships and make a plan for safety and wellbeing for themselves and their children. This randomised controlled trial is testing the effectiveness of a web-based healthy relationship tool and safety decision aid (I-DECIDE). Based broadly on the IRIS trial in the United States, it has been adapted for the Australian context where it is conducted entirely online and uses the Psychosocial Readiness Model as the basis for the intervention. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26231225 PMCID: PMC4522060 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2072-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Primary outcome measures
| Outcome | Measure | Description & purpose | Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self-efficacy | The General Self-Efficacy Scale | The scale assesses a general sense of perceived self-efficacy, aiming to predict coping ability and adaptation to stressful life events. The Scale has 10 questions with response choices on a 4-point scale: Not at all true/Hardly true/ Moderately true /Exactly true. | A higher mean self-efficacy score than the comparison group, by at least a third of a standard deviation, as measured by the General Self-Efficacy Scale [ |
| Depression | The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, Revised (CESD-R) | The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CESD) is widely used in community samples. The 20 items in the CESD-R scale measure symptoms of depression in nine different groups as defined by the DSM-IV. Users are asked to rate the occurrence of symptoms ‘in the past week or so’ from 0 (Rarely or none of the time – less than one day) up to 4 (Nearly every day for two weeks) | A lower mean depression score than the comparison group, by at least a third of a standard deviation, as measured by The Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, Revised (CESD-R) [ |
Secondary outcome measures
| Outcome | Measure | Description & purpose | Hypothesis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Actions for safety and wellbeing | weave service use & activities questionnaire (modified)a | These questions drawn from the | A higher mean number of actions for safety and wellbeing that are helpful than the comparison group, at 6 months post-baseline. |
| Self-care activities questionnaire1 | These questions are a modified list of self-care activities derived from the | ||
| Fear of partner | Visual Analogue scale 0-100 | The participant will be asked to rate their current level of fear of their partner or ex-partner, on a sliding scale from 0 (not at all afraid) to 10 (very afraid). | A lower mean fearfulness score than the comparison group, as measured on a visual analogue scale of current level of fear of partner (0–100), at 12 months post-baseline |
aThese questions were developed for the purposes of this study
Mediators of the outcomes
| Measure | Outcome | Description & purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Perceived support - visual analogue scalea | Perceived support (website) | The participant will be asked to rate how supported they feel by the website on a sliding scale from 0 (completely unsupported) to 10 (completely supported). |
| Contemplation Ladder, modified versiona | Awareness | Women will indicate their position on a modified version of the Contemplation Ladder [ |
aThese questions were developed for the purposes of this study
Fig 1Flow of participants through trial
Moderators of the outcomes
| Measure | Outcome | Description & purpose |
|---|---|---|
|
| External events | This questionnaire was taken from the |
| Medical Outcomes Survey - Social Support, 5-item version (MOS-SS5) | Perceived support (social) | This is a 5-item version of the MOS social support survey. The questions ask the woman how often she has access to support from someone in her life, with response options on a 5-point Likert scale. |