School Intervention to Improve Mental Health of Students in Santiago, Chile. A Randomized Clinical Trial
Author
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Araya, Ricardo
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Fritsch Montero, Rosemarie
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Spears, Melissa
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Rojas Castillo, María Graciela
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Martínez, Vania
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Barroilhet, Sergio
Author
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Voehringer, Paul
Author
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Gunnell, David
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Stallard, Paul
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Guajardo, Viviana
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Gaete, Jorge
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Noble, Sian
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Montgomery, Alan A.
Admission date
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2017-03-28T18:12:45Z
Available date
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2017-03-28T18:12:45Z
Publication date
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2013
Cita de ítem
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JAMA Pediatr. 2013;167(11)
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1001/jamapediatrics.2013.2361
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/143352
Abstract
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IMPORTANCE Depression can have devastating effects unless prevented or treated early and effectively. Schools offer an excellent opportunity to intervene with adolescents presenting emotional problems. There are very few universal school-based depression interventions conducted in low-and middle-income countries.
OBJECTIVE To assess the effectiveness of a school-based, universal psychological intervention to reduce depressive symptoms among adolescents from low-income families.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS A 2-arm, parallel, cluster, randomized clinical trialwas conducted in secondary schools in deprived socioeconomic areas of Santiago, Chile. Almost all students registered in the selected schools consented to take part in the study. A total of 2512 secondary school students from 22 schools and 66 classes participated.
INTERVENTIONS Students in the intervention arm attended 11 one-hour weekly and 2 booster classroom sessions of an intervention based on cognitive-behavioral models. The intervention was delivered by trained nonspecialists. Schools in the control arm received the standard school curriculum.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Scores on the self-administered Beck Depression Inventory-II at 3 months (primary) and 12 months (secondary) after completing the intervention.
RESULTS There were 1291 participants in the control arm and 1221 in the intervention arm. Primary outcome data were available for 82.1% of the participants. There was no evidence of any clinically important difference in mean depression scores between the groups (adjusted difference in mean, -0.19; 95% CI, -1.22 to 0.84) or for any of the other outcomes 3 months after completion of the intervention. No significant differences were found in any of the outcomes at 12 months.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Awell-designed and implemented school-based intervention did not reduce depressive symptoms among socioeconomically deprived adolescents in Santiago, Chile. There is growing evidence that universal school interventions may not be sufficiently effective to reduce or prevent depressive symptoms.