| Literature DB >> 32196462 |
Marcus Bendtsen1, Ulrika Müssener1, Catharina Linderoth1, Kristin Thomas1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High positive mental health, including the ability to cope with the normal stresses of life, work productively, and be able to contribute to one's community, has been associated with various health outcomes. The role of positive mental health is therefore increasingly recognized in national mental health promotion programs and policies. Mobile health (mHealth) interventions could be a cost-effective way to disseminate positive psychological interventions to the general population.Entities:
Keywords: mHealth; positive mental health; randomized controlled trial; university students
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32196462 PMCID: PMC7125436 DOI: 10.2196/17208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
SPIRIT checklist depicting study procedures, measurements, and timeline.
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| Enrollment | Allocation | Post-allocation | Follow-up | ||
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| 0 | Week 5 | Week 10 | 3 months |
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| Eligibility screen |
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| Informed consent | X |
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| Text message intervention |
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| Referred to sources of mental health information |
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| Baseline demographics |
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| MHC-SFa |
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| Mediators |
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| HADSb |
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aMHC-SF: Mental Health Continuum Short Form.
bHADS: Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale.
Figure 1CONSORT diagram of trial participant flow. HADS: Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale; MHC-SF: Mental Health Continuum Short Form.
Baseline characteristics for both study groups.
| Variable | Intervention (n=348) | Control (n=306) | ||
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| .42a | |
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| Female | 277 (79.6) | 233 (76.1) |
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| Male | 69 (19.8) | 69 (22.5) |
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| Other | 2 (0.6) | 4 (1.3) |
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| Age (years), median (IQRb) | 25 (22-29) | 26 (22-30) | .28c | |
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| .73a | |
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| No partner; no children at home | 170 (48.9) | 149 (48.7) |
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| No partner; children at home | 7 (2.0) | 6 (2.0) |
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| Partner; no children at home | 95 (27.3) | 72 (23.5) |
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| Partner; children at home | 46 (13.2) | 47 (15.4) |
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| Partner but not living together | 30 (8.6) | 32 (10.5) |
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| Positive thoughts, median (IQR) | 6 (4-7) | 6 (4-7) | .43c | |
| Positive emotions, median (IQR) | 5 (4-7) | 5 (4-7) | .80c | |
| Anxietyd, median (IQR) | 12 (10-15) | 12 (10-14) | .58c | |
| Depressione, median (IQR) | 6 (4-8) | 6 (4-8) | .93c | |
| Total well-beinge, median (IQR) | 47.5 (40-55) | 50 (40.25-57) | .14c | |
| Emotional well-beingf, mean (SD) | 3.79 (0.89) | 3.77 (0.92) | .78g | |
| Social well-beingf, mean (SD) | 2.93 (0.92) | 3.06 (0.89) | .07g | |
| Psychological well-beingf, mean (SD) | 3.59 (0.91) | 3.67 (0.87) | .24g | |
aFisher exact test.
bIQR: interquartile range.
cMann-Whitney U test.
dHospital Anxiety Depression Scale.
eMental Health Continuum Short Form.
fSubscales of the Mental Health Continuum Short Form calculated as means of responses to each respective subset of questions.
gStudent t test.
Summary of trial hypotheses analyses at the 3-month follow-up assessment.
| Outcome | Follow-up | Differencea | Unadjusted model | Adjusted modelb | ||||||||||
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| Regression coefficientc (95% CI) | Regression coefficient (95% CI) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=213) | 56 (47 to 65) | 7 (1 to 13) | 1.035 (0.985-1.087) | .17 | 1.067 (1.024-1.112) | .002 | ||||||
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| Control (n=168) | 56 (42 to 64.25) | 3 (–4 to 10.25) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=192) | 4 (2 to 6) | –2 (–4 to 0) | 0.817 (0.699-0.954) | .01 | 0.820 (0.714-0.942) | .005 | ||||||
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| Control (n=150) | 4 (2 to 8) | –1 (–3 to –1) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=192) | 9 (7 to 12) | –2 (–4.25 to 0) | 0.926 (0.854-1.004) | .06 | 0.899 (0.840-0.962) | .002 | ||||||
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| Control (n=150) | 10 (8 to 13) | –1 (–3 to –1) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=213) | 4.23 (0.88) | 0.45 (0.86) | 0.152 (–0.037-0.341) | .11 | 0.222 (0.062-0.383) | .007 | ||||||
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| Control (n=168) | 4.08 (0.99) | 0.20 (0.93) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=213) | 3.47 (1.03) | 0.51 (0.89) | 0.082 (–0.136-0.300) | .46 | 0.203 (0.021-0.385) | .03 | ||||||
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| Control (n=168) | 3.39 (1.13) | 0.25 (0.98) | ||||||||||
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| Intervention (n=213) | 4.20 (0.99) | 0.60 (0.90) | 0.166 (–0.040-0.372) | .11 | 0.272 (0.093-0.451) | .003 | ||||||
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| Control (n=168) | 4.04 (1.05) | 0.28 (0.99) | ||||||||||
aDifference between follow-up measurement and baseline measurement.
bAdjusted for outcome measure, gender, age, marital status, and mediators.
cIncidence rate ratio for group by negative binomial regression for total well-being, depression, and anxiety; linear coefficient for emotional well-being, social well-being, and psychological well-being.
dIQR: interquartile range.
Figure 2Interaction between group allocation and marital status.
Figure 3Locally weighted scatterplot smoothing: age against proportion of participants responding to follow-up for all participants.
Figure 4Locally weighted scatterplot smoothing: age against proportion of participants responding to follow-up, including only participants aged less than 40 years at baseline.