Digital Health (Oct 2022)

Effectiveness of a stepped-care programme of internet-based psychological interventions for healthcare workers with psychological distress: Study protocol for the RESPOND healthcare workers randomised controlled trial

  • Roberto Mediavilla,
  • Kerry R McGreevy,
  • Mireia Felez-Nobrega,
  • Anna Monistrol-Mula,
  • María-Fe Bravo-Ortiz,
  • Carmen Bayón,
  • Beatriz Rodríguez-Vega,
  • Pablo Nicaise,
  • Audrey Delaire,
  • Marit Sijbrandij,
  • Anke B. Witteveen,
  • Marianna Purgato,
  • Corrado Barbui,
  • Federico Tedeschi,
  • Maria Melchior,
  • Judith van der Waerden,
  • David McDaid,
  • A-La Park,
  • Raffael Kalisch,
  • Papoula Petri-Romão,
  • James Underhill,
  • Richard A. Bryant,
  • Josep Maria Haro,
  • José Luis Ayuso-Mateos,

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076221129084
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Background and aims The coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic has challenged health services worldwide, with a worsening of healthcare workers’ mental health within initial pandemic hotspots. In early 2022, the Omicron variant is spreading rapidly around the world. This study explores the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a stepped-care programme of scalable, internet-based psychological interventions for distressed health workers on self-reported anxiety and depression symptoms. Methods We present the study protocol for a multicentre (two sites), parallel-group (1:1 allocation ratio), analyst-blinded, superiority, randomised controlled trial. Healthcare workers with psychological distress will be allocated either to care as usual only or to care as usual plus a stepped-care programme that includes two scalable psychological interventions developed by the World Health Organization: A guided self-help stress management guide (Doing What Matters in Times of Stress) and a five-session cognitive behavioural intervention (Problem Management Plus). All participants will receive a single-session emotional support intervention, namely psychological first aid. We will include 212 participants. An intention-to-treat analysis using linear mixed models will be conducted to explore the programme's effect on anxiety and depression symptoms, as measured by the Patient Health Questionnaire – Anxiety and Depression Scale summary score at 21 weeks from baseline. Secondary outcomes include post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, resilience, quality of life, cost impact and cost-effectiveness. Conclusions This study is the first randomised trial that combines two World Health Organization psychological interventions tailored for health workers into one stepped-care programme. Results will inform occupational and mental health prevention, treatment, and recovery strategies. Registration details ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04980326.