Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT06222528
Reducing Stigma and Increasing Treatment Seeking Intentions Among Adolescents
Brief Personalized Videos to Reduce Stigma and Increase Treatment-seeking Behavior Among Adolescents With Depression
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 1,200 (actual)
- Sponsor
- New York State Psychiatric Institute · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 14 Years – 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Depression is a leading cause of illness and disability in teenagers. Longer duration of untreated depression (DUD) is associated with greater severity, poorer outcome, and cognitive impairment. Stigma toward people with depression has been identified as a barrier to seeking help; therefore, reducing stigma toward young people at depressive risk could enhance their receptivity to seeking treatment. Social contact is a form of interpersonal contact with members of the stigmatized group and the most effective type of intervention for improvement in stigma-related knowledge and attitudes. In a prior study, the investigators developed short video interventions to reduce stigma and increase treatment seeking among adolescents with depression. The videos feature adolescent protagonists varied by race/ethncitiy and gender (Black girl, Black boy, White girl, White boy, Hispanic girl, Hispanic boy, nonbinary or transgender adolescent) who will share their experiences with depression, challenges, and recovery process. The investigators would like to conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to test the efficacy of these tailored videos as compared to a video control condition (which provides information about depression and how to seek help but does not include a personal story) on reducing self-stigma and increasing help-seeking intentions and behavior at baseline, post, 2 week follow-up, and 4 week follow-up among adolescents ages 14-18 recruited via Cloudresearch. The videos will be shown again at 2 week follow-up.
Detailed description
In a randomized control trial (RCT) with pre-, post-intervention, and 2 and 4 week follow-up assessments, the investigators aim to test the efficacy of brief social contact video interventions, varying protagonist race/ethnicity, as compared to video control in reducing depression related stigma and increasing treatment-seeking intentions and behavior among adolescents ages 14-18 recruited via Cloudresearch, a crowdsourcing platform. The control condition will include a video that will provide information about depression and how to seek help but does not include a personal story. The tailored video interventions will be assigned based on participant demographics and will include adolescent protagonists varied by race/ethnicity and gender (Black girl, Black boy, White girl, White boy, Hispanic girl, Hispanic boy, nonbinary or transgender adolescent). Videos will be shown at baseline and 2 week follow-up. The investigators hypothesize that 1) Brief social contact-based video interventions will reduce stigma towards depression and increase treatment-seeking intentions and behavior compared to video control which provides information about depression and help seeking but does not include a personal story.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (Black Girl) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young Black girl, a professional actor, sharing her scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (Black Boy) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young Black boy, a professional actor, sharing his scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (Latinx Girl) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young Latinx girl, a professional actor, sharing her scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (Latinx Boy) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young Latinx boy, a professional actor, sharing his scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (White Girl) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young White girl, a professional actor, sharing her scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (White Boy) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young White boy, a professional actor, sharing his scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Brief video intervention (Nonbinary or transgender) | A brief social contact-based video. The video presented a young nonbinary or transgender adolescent, a professional actor, sharing their scripted personal story of struggles with depression and raising themes of recovery and hope. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Control Condition | A video that will provide information about depression and how to seek help but does not include a personal story. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-06-03
- Primary completion
- 2024-08-17
- Completion
- 2024-08-17
- First posted
- 2024-01-24
- Last updated
- 2024-09-04
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06222528. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.