Healthy Campus Trial: a multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) fully factorial trial to optimize the smartphone cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) app for mental health promotion among university students: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
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Authors
Uwatoko, Teruhisa
Luo, Yan
Sakata, Masatsugu
Kobayashi, Daisuke
Sakagami, Yu
Takemoto, Kazumi
Collins, Linda M
Watkins, Ed
Hollon, Steven D
Wason, James
Noma, Hisashi
Horikoshi, Masaru
Kawamura, Takashi
Iwami, Taku
Furukawa, Toshi A
Publication Date
2018-07-04Type
Journal Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Uwatoko, T., Luo, Y., Sakata, M., Kobayashi, D., Sakagami, Y., Takemoto, K., Collins, L. M., et al. (2018). Healthy Campus Trial: a multiphase optimization strategy (MOST) fully factorial trial to optimize the smartphone cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) app for mental health promotion among university students: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. [Journal Article]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2719-z
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Youth in general and college life in particular are characterized by new educational, vocational, and interpersonal challenges, opportunities, and substantial stress. It is estimated that 30–50% of university students meet criteria for some mental disorder, especially depression, in any given year. The university has traditionally provided many channels to promote students’ mental health, but until now only a minority have sought such help, possibly owing to lack of time and/or to stigma related to mental illness. Smartphone-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) shows promise for its accessibility and effectiveness. However, its most effective components and for whom it is more (or less) effective are not known.
Methods/design
Based on the multiphase optimization strategy framework, this study is a parallel-group, multicenter, open, fully factorial trial examining five smartphone-delivered CBT components (self-monitoring, cognitive restructuring, behavioral activation, assertion training, and problem solving) among university students with elevated distress, defined as scoring 5 or more on the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). The primary outcome is change in PHQ-9 scores from baseline to week 8. We will estimate specific efficacy of the five components and their interactions through the mixed-effects repeated-measures analysis and propose the most effective and efficacious combinations of components. Effect modification by selected baseline characteristics will be examined in exploratory analyses.
Discussion
The highly efficient experimental design will allow identification of the most effective components and the most efficient combinations thereof among the five components of smartphone CBT for university students. Pragmatically, the findings will help make the most efficacious CBT package accessible to a large number of distressed university students at reduced cost; theoretically, they will shed light on the underlying mechanisms of CBT and help further advance CBT for depression.
Trial registration
UMIN,
CTR-000031307
. Registered on February 14, 2018.
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-018-2719-z
This record's DOI: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.25155
Rights
Rights Holder: The Author(s).
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