| Literature DB >> 32452336 |
M Sangraula1, E L Turner2, N P Luitel1, E van 't Hof3, P Shrestha1, R Ghimire1, R Bryant4, K Marahatta5, M van Ommeren3, B A Kohrt1,6, M J D Jordans1,7.
Abstract
AIMS: Psychological interventions that are brief, acceptable, effective and can be delivered by non-specialists are especially necessary in low- and middle-income countries, where mental health systems are unable to address the high level of psychosocial needs. Problem Management Plus (PM+) is a five-session intervention designed for those impaired by psychological distress while living in communities affected by adversity. Individual PM+ has demonstrated effectiveness in reducing distress in Kenya and Pakistan, and a group version of PM+ (Group PM+) was effective for conflict-affected women in Pakistan. This paper describes a feasibility and acceptability trial of locally adapted Group PM+ for women and men in an earthquake-affected region of rural Nepal.Entities:
Keywords: Group therapy; mental health; other psychosocial techniques/treatments; randomised controlled trials
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32452336 PMCID: PMC7264859 DOI: 10.1017/S2045796020000414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci ISSN: 2045-7960 Impact factor: 6.892
Feasibility and acceptability criteria and outcomes
| Feasibility and acceptability criteria | Definition and measures | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Fidelity to Group PM+ elements at the level of 75% or greater | This was operationalised as the mean fidelity checklist for Group PM+ elements across all sessions. A combined competency and fidelity checklist was created based on both Group PM+ elements and common factors in psychological treatments, with the latter items drawn from the ENhancing Assessment of Common Therapeutic factors (ENACT) tool (Kohrt | All Group PM+ facilitators ( |
| Lack of significant socio-demographic group differences | Tabulation of descriptive summaries for baseline characteristics comparing Group PM+ participants and EUC participants without significant group differences in education, economic status, age, gender and medical comorbidities | Participants in both the arms were similar in – age categories (with the mean age around 45–46 years old), gender (16–17% male), occupation (half the participants worked as housewives followed by farming), marital status (around 80% were married followed by 11–15% were widowed) and religion (87–90% practised Hinduism). Participants in the arms differed slightly by their caste group; the intervention arm had a high percentage of Danuwar caste and control arm had a high percentage of Brahman/Chhetri caste. |
| Retention of at least 67% of participants | Through completion of 5 Group PM+ sessions; 100% retention is defined as attending all five sessions | Of the total participants ( |
| Fewer than 15% missing items | Operationalised as 15% of missing individual items across five key outcome measures (PHQ-9, WHODAS, GHQ, PCL-5 and RTC) | There were no missing outcomes across the five key measurements |
| Presence of adverse events among fewer than 10% of participants and any serious adverse events | Adverse events included marked increase in suicidal thoughts of trial participants, increased emotional distress and increased family conflict from the start of the trial. Serious adverse events include death of trial participants, suicide attempt, serious violence. This was operationalised as fewer than 10% of participants experiencing any serious adverse events. | A total of seven adverse events (5%) were reported amongst the 121 participants. The majority of these adverse events followed-up by a counsellor included suicidality and included one death due to a health problem unrelated to the study. |
Fig. 1.Group PM+ study flow chart.
Quantitative acceptability and feasibility measures
| Variable – | Group PM+ | EUC |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptability of intervention | ||
| Competency in common factors (%, IQR) | ||
| Pre-training in psychosocial foundations | 23% (11–44%) | 27% (11–61%) |
| Post-training in psychosocial foundations | 76% (61–89%) | 84% (72–94%) |
| Fidelity of PM+ facilitators | ||
| To 75% or more items in each of 5 group sessions | 4 (100%) | |
| To 75% or more items in more than 3 group sessions | 4 (100%) | |
| Group PM+ participation | ||
| Number of sessions attended | ||
| 0 | 2 (3%) | |
| 1 | 3 (5%) | |
| 2 | 0 (0%) | |
| 3 | 10 (16.4%) | |
| 4 | 14 (23.0%) | |
| 5 | 32 (52.5%) | |
| Outcome measurements | ||
| All items of outcome measured at baseline | ||
| PHQ-9 | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| WHODAS | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| GHQ | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| PCL-5 | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| RTC | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| All items of outcome measured at endline | ||
| PHQ-9 | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| WHODAS | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| GHQ | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| PCL-5 | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| RTC | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| All key outcomes measured | ||
| Baseline | 61 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| Endline | 58 (100%) | 60 (100%) |
| Time (days) between: [median (25th, 75th percentile)] | ||
| Screening and baseline interview | 10 (5, 32) | 9 (6, 14) |
| Baseline interview and endline interview | 42 (36, 47) | 48 (43, 52) |
| Adverse events | ||
| Any adverse event | 4 | 2 |
| Serious adverse event | 0 | 1 |
Unless otherwise noted.
Of five key measures: PHQ-9, WHODAS, GHQ, PCL-5 and RTC. Note, at baseline, WHODAS and GHQ were measured at screening and the remaining three measures at the baseline interview. Additionally, there were no missing items for any of the five measures at either time point.
Of those who were not lost to follow-up (n = 58 in intervention and n = 60 in control).
All six were suicidal thoughts.
Death unrelated to the study.
Demographic characteristics of 121 enrolled participants by study arm
| Characteristic – | Group PM+ ( | EUC ( |
|---|---|---|
| Male | 10 (17%) | 10 (16%) |
| Age (years) – mean ( | 46.7 (14.0) | 49.3 (13.6) |
| Age categories (years) | ||
| <30 | 3 (5%) | 6 (9.8%) |
| 30–<40 | 13 (21.7%) | 11 (18.0%) |
| 40–<50 | 18 (30.0%) | 19 (31.2%) |
| 50–<60 | 10 (16.7%) | 14 (23.0%) |
| 60–<70 | 11 (18.3%) | 7 (11.5%) |
| 70+ | 5 (8.3%) | 4 (6.6%) |
| Education level | ||
| Illiterate | 36 (59%) | 48 (80%) |
| Informal education | 11 (18%) | 7 (12%) |
| Primary | 6 (10%) | 3 (5%) |
| Secondary | 4 (7%) | 2 (3%) |
| Higher secondary | 4 (7%) | 0 (0%) |
| University | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Occupation | ||
| Farmer | 20 (33%) | 21 (35%) |
| Office job | 2 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Business | 4 (7%) | 0 (0%) |
| Daily wage labourer | 3 (5%) | 4 (7%) |
| Unemployed | 1 (2%) | 1 (2%) |
| Housewife | 29 (48%) | 33 (55%) |
| Other | 2 (4%) | 1 (2%) |
| Marital status | ||
| Unmarried | 2 (3%) | 2 (3%) |
| Married | 50 (82%) | 48 (80%) |
| Widowed | 7 (11%) | 9 (15%) |
| Divorced | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) |
| Separated | 1 (2%) | 1 (2%) |
| Family type | ||
| Singular family | 26 (43%) | 42 (70%) |
| Nuclear family | 35 (57%) | 18 (30%) |
| Lives with | ||
| Extended family with spouse | 12 (20%) | 16 (27%) |
| Extended family without spouse | 7 (11%) | 12 (20%) |
| With parents | 6 (10%) | 1 (2%) |
| Spouse only | 6 (10%) | 5 (8%) |
| Spouse and children only | 25 (41%) | 22 (37%) |
| Other | 5 (8%) | 4 (7%) |
| Number of members in household | ||
| Median (25th, 75th percentile) | 5 (3, 6) | 5 (3, 6) |
| Caste | ||
| Brahman/Chhetri | 13 (21%) | 27 (45%) |
| Dalit | 9 (15%) | 14 (23%) |
| Danuwar | 23 (38%) | 3 (5%) |
| Other | 16 (26%) | 16 (26%) |
| Religion | ||
| Hindu | 55 (90%) | 52 (87%) |
| Other | 6 (10%) | 8 (13%) |
| Most-used language | ||
| Nepali | 37 (61%) | 58 (97%) |
| Danuwar | 22 (36%) | 2 (3%) |
| Other | 2 (3%) | 0 (0%) |
| Self-perceived socioeconomic status | ||
| Very bad | 0 (0%) | 11 (18%) |
| Bad | 8 (13%) | 17 (28%) |
| Normal | 38 (62%) | 27 (45%) |
| Good | 14 (23%) | 5 (8%) |
| Very good | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) |
| Chronic disease | ||
| Reported a chronic disease | 18 (30%) | 20 (33%) |
| Of those with chronic disease, primary | ||
| Hypertension | 5 (28%) | 6 (30%) |
| Asthma | 3 (17%) | 6 (30%) |
| Other | 10 (55%) | 8 (40%) |
| Earthquake exposure | ||
| Experienced aftershocks | 60 (98%) | 57 (95%) |
| Home badly damaged or destroyed | 26 (43%) | 34 (57%) |
| Trapped under rubble | 8 (13%) | 1 (2%) |
| Injury from the earthquake | 4 (7%) | 6 (10%) |
| Close friends or family injured | 7 (11%) | 5 (8%) |
| Close friends or family killed | 1 (2%) | 2 (3%) |
Unless otherwise stated.
If more than one was reported, the primary type was selected and the secondary reported in ‘Other’. In these data, each person reported at most one.
Outcomes at baseline and endline of n = 121 enrolled participants by study arm – mean (s.d.) reported
| For all | For | ICC (95% CI) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Baseline | Endline | Change | Baseline | Endline | ||||||
| Construct | Instrument (range) | Group PM+ ( | EUC ( | Group PM+ ( | EUC ( | Group PM+ ( | EUC ( | Group PM+ ( | EUC ( | ( | ( |
| Primary outcome | |||||||||||
| Depressive symptoms | PHQ-9 (0–27) | 9.8 (4.9) | 10.7 (4.4) | 9.7 (4.8) | 10.9 (4.3) | 6.2 (3.7) | 9.3 (4.3) | −3.5 (4.8) | −1.6 (3.4) | 0.12 (0.03, 0.41) | – |
| Secondary outcomes | |||||||||||
| Daily functioning | WHODAS (12–60) | 21.8 (5.3) | 20.8 (4.1) | 21.5 (4.9) | 20.9 (4.2) | 12.1 (8.0) | 15.7 (6.4) | −9.4 (8.4) | −5.2 (6.7) | 0.10 (0.01, 0.59) | 0.09 (0.01, 0.62) |
| General psychological distress | GHQ-12 (0–36) | 24.3 (4.8) | 21.3 (4.7) | 24.2 (4.8) | 21.4 (4.8) | 11.9 (6.6) | 17.6 (6.0) | −12.3 (7.5) | −3.7 (7.0) | 0.16 (0.02, 0.62) | 0.06 (0.00, 0.75) |
| Psychosocial MH problems | PMHP (5–20) | 10.2 (3.3) | 11.1 (2.7) | 10.1 (3.3) | 11.2 (2.7) | 9.1 (3.0) | 11.2 (2.9) | −1.0 (2.8) | −0.1 (2.7) | 0.16 (0.05, 0.41) | 0.03 (0.00, 0.97) |
| PTSD | PCL-5 (8–40) | 17.6 (7.2) | 21.5 (5.9) | 17.5 (7.2) | 21.8 (5.7) | 14.8 (8.1) | 20.5 (5.6) | −2.7 (7.0) | −1.3 (5.6) | 0.21 (0.08, 0.45) | – |
| Other outcomes | |||||||||||
| Reducing tension skills | RTC (0–40) | 15.6 (4.7) | 10.1 (5.0) | 15.6 (4.8) | 10.2 (5.1) | 20.6 (5.8) | 9.4 (4.2) | 5.0 (5.8) | −0.7 (4.6) | 0.24 (0.09, 0.50) | 0.21 (0.05, 0.59) |
| Perceived social support | MSPSS (12–60) | 33.4 (7.9) | 29.9 (8.7) | 33.3 (8.0) | 29.6 (8.7) | 34.2 (7.0) | 29.4 (8.7) | 0.9 (7.5) | −0.1 (7.9) | – | 0.04 (0.00, 0.87) |
MH, mental health.
Estimated using linear mixed-effects regression with a fixed intercept and random intercepts for the unit of clustering, with estimation by restricted maximum likelihood estimation to account for the small number of clusters.
Unit of clustering is ward at baseline, of which there are 17.
Unit of clustering is PM+ group, of which there are 10.
Not estimable.
Qualitative interview results
| Domain | Theme | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptability | Idiom usage (usage of ‘khulla man’, use of tension) | ‘ |
| Acceptability of assessments and intervention | ‘ | |
| Benefits of a group format | ‘ | |
| Hesitancy because of prior notions of MH | ‘ | |
| Perceived utility | Improvements in somatic symptoms | ‘ |
| Session materials/practicing outside of sessions | ‘ | |
| Males in Group PM+ | ‘ |