Syed Usman Hamdani1, Azza Warraitch1, Nadia Suleman1, Naila Muzzafar1, Fareed Aslam Minhas1, Asad Tameezuddin Nizami1, Siham Sikander1, Beverly Pringle1, Hesham M Hamoda1, Duolao Wang1, Atif Rahman1, Lawrence S Wissow1. 1. Department of Primary Care and Mental Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom (Hamdani, Huma, Rahman); Institute of Psychiatry, World Health Organization Collaborating Centre for Mental Health Research and Training, Rawalpindi, Pakistan (Hamdani, Minhas, Nizami); Human Development Research Foundation, Islamabad, Pakistan (Hamdani, Huma, Warraitch, Suleman, Muzzafar, Sikander); National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland (Pringle); Department of Psychiatry, Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston (Hamoda); Department of Clinical Sciences, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, United Kingdom (Wang); Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle (Wissow).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization's (WHO) Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) developed a school mental health program (SMHP) to help reduce the burden of youth mental health problems. Designed in collaboration with international consultants, the SMHP draws on evidence-based interventions to train personnel to identify students in need, respond therapeutically, and engage families in seeking care. METHODS: Teams from Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, and Jordan collaborated with the WHO EMRO and British and U.S. universities to form the School Health Implementation Network: Eastern Mediterranean Region (SHINE), a National Institute of Mental Health-funded global mental health hub. SHINE partners used a "theory of change" process to adapt the SMHP to be more readily adopted by school personnel and replicated with fidelity. The adapted SMHP more directly addresses teachers' priorities and uses technology to facilitate training. RESULTS: A cluster-randomized implementation effectiveness trial enrolling 960 children ages 8-13 in 80 Pakistani schools will test the adapted SMHP against the original. Children who screen positive on first the teacher and subsequently the parent Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaires (SDQs) will be enrolled and tracked for 9 months. The primary trial outcome is reduction in parent-rated SDQ total difficulties scores. Secondary outcomes include children's well-being, academic performance, absenteeism, and perceived stigma; parent-teacher interaction; teachers' self-efficacy and subjective well-being; and school environment. Implementation outcomes include change in teachers' behavior and sense of program acceptability, cultural appropriateness, feasibility, penetration, and sustainability. NEXT STEPS: The trial began in October 2019, and the expected completion date is March 2021. Outcomes will inform dissemination of the SMHP in Pakistan and elsewhere.
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization's (WHO) Eastern Mediterranean Regional Office (EMRO) developed a school mental health program (SMHP) to help reduce the burden of youth mental health problems. Designed in collaboration with international consultants, the SMHP draws on evidence-based interventions to train personnel to identify students in need, respond therapeutically, and engage families in seeking care. METHODS: Teams from Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, and Jordan collaborated with the WHO EMRO and British and U.S. universities to form the School Health Implementation Network: Eastern Mediterranean Region (SHINE), a National Institute of Mental Health-funded global mental health hub. SHINE partners used a "theory of change" process to adapt the SMHP to be more readily adopted by school personnel and replicated with fidelity. The adapted SMHP more directly addresses teachers' priorities and uses technology to facilitate training. RESULTS: A cluster-randomized implementation effectiveness trial enrolling 960 children ages 8-13 in 80 Pakistani schools will test the adapted SMHP against the original. Children who screen positive on first the teacher and subsequently the parent Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaires (SDQs) will be enrolled and tracked for 9 months. The primary trial outcome is reduction in parent-rated SDQ total difficulties scores. Secondary outcomes include children's well-being, academic performance, absenteeism, and perceived stigma; parent-teacher interaction; teachers' self-efficacy and subjective well-being; and school environment. Implementation outcomes include change in teachers' behavior and sense of program acceptability, cultural appropriateness, feasibility, penetration, and sustainability. NEXT STEPS: The trial began in October 2019, and the expected completion date is March 2021. Outcomes will inform dissemination of the SMHP in Pakistan and elsewhere.
Entities:
Keywords:
LMICs; child mental health; public schools; school based mental health programs; school psychosocial environment; technology assisted teachers’ training program
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