Frontiers in Psychiatry (Nov 2023)

Piloting a mental health intervention for young adults in poverty enrolled in post-secondary education in post-conflict regions in Colombia: a study protocol

  • Annie Zimmerman,
  • María Camila García Durán,
  • Ricardo Araya,
  • Mauricio Avendano,
  • Mauricio Avendano,
  • Philipp Hessel,
  • Yadira Díaz,
  • Omar Dario Peña Niño,
  • Sara Donetto,
  • Martha Escobar Lux,
  • Martha Escobar Lux,
  • Martha Escobar Lux,
  • Fabio Idrobo,
  • Fabio Idrobo,
  • Fabio Idrobo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1238725
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundColombia has endured more than five decades of internal armed conflict, which led to substantial costs for human capital and mental health. There is currently little evidence about the impact of incorporating a mental health intervention within an existing public cash transfer program to address poverty, and this project aims to develop and pilot a mental health support intervention embedded within the human capital program to achieve better outcomes among beneficiaries, especially those displaced by conflict and the most socioeconomically vulnerable.MethodsThe study will consist of three phases: semi-structured one-to-one interviews, co-design and adaptations of the proposed intervention with participants and pilot of the digital intervention based on cognitive behavioral therapy and transdiagnostic techniques to determine its feasibility, acceptability, efficacy, and usefulness in ‘real settings’. Results will inform if the intervention improves clinical, educational and employment prospects among those who use it.ResultsKnowledge will be generated on whether the mental health intervention could potentially improve young people’s mental health and human capital in conflict-affected areas? We will evaluate of the impact of potential mental health improvements on human capital outcomes, including educational and employment outcomes.ConclusionFindings will help to make conclusions about the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention, and it will assess its effectiveness to improve the mental health and human capital outcomes of beneficiaries. This will enable the identification of strategies to address mental health problems among socioeconomically vulnerable young people that can be adapted to different contexts in in low and middle-income countries.

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