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UnknownNCT04319458

Testing Mediators and Moderators of a Fotonovela for Depression to Promote Help-seeking Behavior

Entertainment Education for Depression in Latinx Adults: Testing Mediators and Moderators of a Culture-Centric Narrative Intervention to Promote Help-Seeking Behavior

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
182 (actual)
Sponsor
University of California, Los Angeles · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Although rates of depression are similar in Latinx populations compared to non-Latinx whites (NLW), there are significant disparities in service utilization. Mental health literacy - one's knowledge and attitudes about mental health and treatment-seeking - is a significant predictor of help-seeking behavior and likely contributes to mental health disparities among Latinx. Understanding ways to improve mental health literacy in Latinx populations is important to reducing these disparities. Health literacy interventions that are engaging, dramatic, and culturally-relevant, such as fotonovelas (graphic novels designed to change health-related knowledge and attitudes), show promise in changing mental health literacy in Latinx populations. However, little is known about how these interventions work and for whom they are most effective. Furthermore, although there is some evidence that fotonovelas can change mental health attitudes and intent to seek treatment, their impact on help-seeking behavior is less understood. The purpose of this study is to examine 1) if narrative and cultural elements of a fotonovela for Latinx with depression (i.e., transportation, identification, and social proliferation) are important mediators in changing mental health attitudes and help-seeking behaviors and 2) if factors such as rurality, acculturation, depression severity and logistic barriers to treatment moderate these relationships.

Detailed description

Latinx adults with depression are a particularly vulnerable population; although Latinx exhibit similar rates of depression to other racial/ethnic groups, they are less likely to seek treatment, are more likely to drop out of treatment, and thus experience greater chronicity of depression. This health disparity is likely due to a complex network of factors, but mental health literacy is one important contributing factor. Latinx are more likely to exhibit lower mental health literacy (including misconceptions, stigma, knowledge of treatment, etc.), which contributes to lower rates of treatment-seeking. Understanding how to engage Latinx in depression treatment by overcoming health literacy barriers is important in reducing health disparities. Entertainment-education interventions are those that use popular media to engage consumers and deliver health messages. These interventions hypothesized to be useful in targeting populations with health disparities in encouraging changes in health-related behavior through dramatic and culturally-relevant narrative elements. However, no study has tested these theorized mechanisms in helping to explain changes in health literacy and subsequent health behavior. This study will test the impact of a graphic novel about depression specifically for Latinx adults with depressive symptoms on theorized mediators, including transportation (feeling emotionally engaged in the narrative), identification (cultural relevance of characters, their language, and their appearance), and social proliferation (sharing of health information and mutual reinforcement of health behaviors). Furthermore, this study will test if these mediators help explain changes in mental health literacy and subsequent health behavior. Lastly, this study will test moderators of changes in mental health literacy and behavior to determine for whom the fotonovela has the largest impact.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFotonovelaSecret Feelings/Sentimientos Secretos
BEHAVIORALControlNIH Brochure: Depression: What You Need to Know

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-01
Primary completion
2020-08-30
Completion
2020-08-30
First posted
2020-03-24
Last updated
2020-03-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04319458. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.