Trials (Feb 2024)

Trial protocol for the Building Resilience through Socio-Emotional Training (ReSET) programme: a cluster randomised controlled trial of a new transdiagnostic preventative intervention for adolescents

  • Essi Viding,
  • Alex Lloyd,
  • Roslyn Law,
  • Peter Martin,
  • Laura Lucas,
  • Tom Chin-Han Wu,
  • Nikolaus Steinbeis,
  • Nick Midgley,
  • René Veenstra,
  • Jaime Smith,
  • Lili Ly,
  • Geoffrey Bird,
  • Jennifer Murphy,
  • David Plans,
  • Marcus Munafo,
  • Ian Penton-Voak,
  • Jessica Deighton,
  • Kathleen Richards,
  • Mya Richards,
  • Pasco Fearon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-024-07931-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
pp. 1 – 21

Abstract

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Abstract Background Adolescence is a period of heightened vulnerability to developing mental health problems, and rates of mental health disorder in this age group have increased in the last decade. Preventing mental health problems developing before they become entrenched, particularly in adolescents who are at high risk, is an important research and clinical target. Here, we report the protocol for the trial of the ‘Building Resilience through Socioemotional Training’ (ReSET) intervention. ReSET is a new, preventative intervention that incorporates individual-based emotional training techniques and group-based social and communication skills training. We take a transdiagnostic approach, focusing on emotion processing and social mechanisms implicated in the onset and maintenance of various forms of psychopathology. Methods A cluster randomised allocation design is adopted with randomisation at the school year level. Five-hundred and forty adolescents (aged 12–14) will be randomised to either receive the intervention or not (passive control). The intervention is comprised of weekly sessions over an 8-week period, supplemented by two individual sessions. The primary outcomes, psychopathology symptoms and mental wellbeing, will be assessed pre- and post-intervention, and at a 1-year follow-up. Secondary outcomes are task-based assessments of emotion processing, social network data based on peer nominations, and subjective ratings of social relationships. These measures will be taken at baseline, post-intervention and 1-year follow-up. A subgroup of participants and stakeholders will be invited to take part in focus groups to assess the acceptability of the intervention. Discussion This project adopts a theory-based approach to the development of a new intervention designed to target the close connections between young people’s emotions and their interpersonal relationships. By embedding the intervention within a school setting and using a cluster-randomised design, we aim to develop and test a feasible, scalable intervention to prevent the onset of psychopathology in adolescence. Trial registration ISRCTN88585916. Trial registration date: 20/04/2023.

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