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UnknownNCT05413408

Intervention to Decrease the Stigma of Nursing Students

Chinese Culture-Specific Intervention to Decrease the Stigma of Nursing Students Towards Schizophrenia--A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

not

Detailed description

Introduction Mental illness stigma is influenced by empathy, culture, and beliefs. However, few researchers specifically consider empathy, culture, and beliefs when designing interventions to reduce stigma. Schizophrenia is the most stigmatized mental illnesses. Nursing students will play the role of health educators and provide care for patients in the future. Their stigmas will negatively impact the care quality provided to people diagnosed with schizophrenia if not properly attended. This study intends to examine the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of an education and contact intervention programme aiming to improve nursing students' knowledge and empathy of schizophrenia and decrease their negative attitudes and stigma behavior towards people with schizophrenia. Methods and Analysis This is a two-phase study design. Phase 1 development includes a literature review and a descriptive qualitative study. Phase 2 is a pilot study, the feasibility, accessibility, and efficacy of the pilot RCT will be assessed by the quantitative and qualitative study. In the first phase, descriptive qualitative study with focus group and a literature review will be used to inform the intervention development of a pilot RCT. The second phase includes a pilot RCT including 60 nursing students who 7 practice in clinical settings of a tertiary hospital. These nursing students will be randomly assigned into the intervention group and the control group. The pilot study intervention consists of three stages, including the investigative learning activity (lasting about 6 hours), the collaborative activity (lasting about 4 hours), and the higher-order thinking activity (lasting about 4 hours). Both the intervention group and the control group will be interns in the tertiary hospital simultaneously when they take part in this study. The control group go through only one stage--they will be given a book about schizophrenia knowledge and asked to finish reading it in four weeks. After the pilot intervention study, there will be a process evaluation of a qualitative interview. Both first and second phase qualitative study will use qualitative research of fourth-year nursing students being focus groups interviewed. The pilot intervention study outcomes include nursing students' knowledge, attitude, and behavioral intentions regarding stigma towards schizophrenia, and nursing students' empathy towards people with schizophrenia. The pilot intervention study effect will be evaluated by the researcher and the results of the two groups will be compared on the baseline (T0), post-intervention (T1), and three months follow-up (T2).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHEREducation and contactThe intervention consists of three phases, including investigative learning activity (this section will last about one week), higher-order thinking activity (this section will last about two hours), collaborative activity (this section will last about two hours). Both the intervention group and the control group will be interns in the hospital simultaneously. The study outcomes include nursing students' knowledge, attitude, and behavioral intentions regarding stigma towards schizophrenia. The intervention effect will be evaluated by the researcher, comparing results between and within the two groups from baseline (T0) to immediately after first and second session intervention (T1), immediately after third session intervention (T2), and three months follow-up (T3). The control group only has one session and will be given a book of schizophrenia knowledge, and they will be asked to finish reading it in four weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2023-02-01
Primary completion
2023-03-31
Completion
2023-07-01
First posted
2022-06-10
Last updated
2023-03-01

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05413408. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.