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Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth

We describe initial pilot findings from a novel school-based approach to reduce youth depression and suicidality, the Empowering a Multimodal Pathway Towards Healthy Youth (EMPATHY) program. Here we present the findings from the pilot cohort of 3,244 youth aged 11–18 (Grades 6-12). They were screene...

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Autores principales: Silverstone, Peter H., Bercov, Marni, Suen, Victoria Y. M., Allen, Andrea, Cribben, Ivor, Goodrick, Jodi, Henry, Stu, Pryce, Catherine, Langstraat, Pieter, Rittenbach, Katherine, Chakraborty, Samprita, Engels, Rutger C., McCabe, Christopher
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4431804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25974146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125527
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author Silverstone, Peter H.
Bercov, Marni
Suen, Victoria Y. M.
Allen, Andrea
Cribben, Ivor
Goodrick, Jodi
Henry, Stu
Pryce, Catherine
Langstraat, Pieter
Rittenbach, Katherine
Chakraborty, Samprita
Engels, Rutger C.
McCabe, Christopher
author_facet Silverstone, Peter H.
Bercov, Marni
Suen, Victoria Y. M.
Allen, Andrea
Cribben, Ivor
Goodrick, Jodi
Henry, Stu
Pryce, Catherine
Langstraat, Pieter
Rittenbach, Katherine
Chakraborty, Samprita
Engels, Rutger C.
McCabe, Christopher
author_sort Silverstone, Peter H.
collection PubMed
description We describe initial pilot findings from a novel school-based approach to reduce youth depression and suicidality, the Empowering a Multimodal Pathway Towards Healthy Youth (EMPATHY) program. Here we present the findings from the pilot cohort of 3,244 youth aged 11–18 (Grades 6-12). They were screened for depression, suicidality, anxiety, use of drugs, alcohol, or tobacco (DAT), quality-of-life, and self-esteem. Additionally, all students in Grades 7 and 8 (mean ages 12.3 and 13.3 respectively) also received an 8-session cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) based program designed to increase resiliency to depression. Following screening there were rapid interventions for the 125 students (3.9%) who were identified as being actively suicidal, as well as for another 378 students (11.7%) who were felt to be at higher-risk of self-harm based on a combination of scores from all the scales. The intervention consisted of an interview with the student and their family followed by offering a guided internet-based CBT program. Results from the 2,790 students who completed scales at both baseline and 12-week follow-up showed significant decreases in depression and suicidality. Importantly, there was a marked decrease in the number of students who were actively suicidal (from n=125 at baseline to n=30 at 12-weeks). Of the 503 students offered the CBT program 163 (32%) took part, and this group had significantly lower depression scores compared to those who didn’t take part. There were no improvements in self-esteem, quality-of-life, or the number of students using DAT. Only 60 students (2% of total screened) required external referral during the 24-weeks following study initiation. These results suggest that a multimodal school-based program may provide an effective and pragmatic approach to help reduce youth depression and suicidality. Further research is required to determine longer-term efficacy, reproducibility, and key program elements. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02169960
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spelling pubmed-44318042015-05-27 Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth Silverstone, Peter H. Bercov, Marni Suen, Victoria Y. M. Allen, Andrea Cribben, Ivor Goodrick, Jodi Henry, Stu Pryce, Catherine Langstraat, Pieter Rittenbach, Katherine Chakraborty, Samprita Engels, Rutger C. McCabe, Christopher PLoS One Research Article We describe initial pilot findings from a novel school-based approach to reduce youth depression and suicidality, the Empowering a Multimodal Pathway Towards Healthy Youth (EMPATHY) program. Here we present the findings from the pilot cohort of 3,244 youth aged 11–18 (Grades 6-12). They were screened for depression, suicidality, anxiety, use of drugs, alcohol, or tobacco (DAT), quality-of-life, and self-esteem. Additionally, all students in Grades 7 and 8 (mean ages 12.3 and 13.3 respectively) also received an 8-session cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) based program designed to increase resiliency to depression. Following screening there were rapid interventions for the 125 students (3.9%) who were identified as being actively suicidal, as well as for another 378 students (11.7%) who were felt to be at higher-risk of self-harm based on a combination of scores from all the scales. The intervention consisted of an interview with the student and their family followed by offering a guided internet-based CBT program. Results from the 2,790 students who completed scales at both baseline and 12-week follow-up showed significant decreases in depression and suicidality. Importantly, there was a marked decrease in the number of students who were actively suicidal (from n=125 at baseline to n=30 at 12-weeks). Of the 503 students offered the CBT program 163 (32%) took part, and this group had significantly lower depression scores compared to those who didn’t take part. There were no improvements in self-esteem, quality-of-life, or the number of students using DAT. Only 60 students (2% of total screened) required external referral during the 24-weeks following study initiation. These results suggest that a multimodal school-based program may provide an effective and pragmatic approach to help reduce youth depression and suicidality. Further research is required to determine longer-term efficacy, reproducibility, and key program elements. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02169960 Public Library of Science 2015-05-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4431804/ /pubmed/25974146 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125527 Text en © 2015 Silverstone et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Silverstone, Peter H.
Bercov, Marni
Suen, Victoria Y. M.
Allen, Andrea
Cribben, Ivor
Goodrick, Jodi
Henry, Stu
Pryce, Catherine
Langstraat, Pieter
Rittenbach, Katherine
Chakraborty, Samprita
Engels, Rutger C.
McCabe, Christopher
Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title_full Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title_fullStr Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title_full_unstemmed Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title_short Initial Findings from a Novel School-Based Program, EMPATHY, Which May Help Reduce Depression and Suicidality in Youth
title_sort initial findings from a novel school-based program, empathy, which may help reduce depression and suicidality in youth
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4431804/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25974146
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0125527
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