心理干预
感恩
焦虑
心态
临床心理学
心理健康
随机对照试验
心理学
医学
干预(咨询)
精神科
心理治疗师
内科学
认识论
哲学
作者
Katherine E. Venturo‐Conerly,Tom L. Osborn,Rediet Alemu,Elizabeth Roe,Micaela Rodriguez,Jenny Gan,Susana Arango,Akash R. Wasil,Christine Wasanga,John R. Weisz
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.brat.2022.104040
摘要
Expanding mental healthcare for adolescents in low-income regions is a global health priority. Group interventions delivered by lay-providers may expand treatment options. Brief, positively-focused interventions conveying core concepts of adaptive functioning may help reduce adolescent symptoms of mental illness. In this trial, we tested three such interventions (growth mindset, gratitude, and value affirmation) as separate single-session interventions.Consenting adolescents (N = 895; Mage = 16.00) from two secondary schools in Kenya were randomized by classroom (24 classrooms; Mclass = 37.29 students) into single-session interventions: growth (N = 240), gratitude (N = 221), values (N = 244), or an active study-skills control (N = 190). Mixed-effects models controlling for age and gender were used to estimate individual-level intervention effects on anxiety and depression symptoms.Within the universal sample, the values intervention produced greater reductions in anxiety symptoms than the study-skills control (p < .05; d = 0.31 [0.13-0.50]). Within the clinical sub-sample (N = 299), the values (p < .01; d = 0.49 [0.09-0.89]) and growth interventions (p < .05; d = 0.39 [0.01-0.76]) produced greater reductions in anxiety symptoms. There were no significant effects on depression.The values intervention reduced anxiety for the full sample, as did the growth mindset and values interventions for symptomatic youths. Future efforts should examine durability of these effects over time.
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