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Standardising Training of Nurses in an Evidence-Based Psychosocial Intervention for Perinatal Depression: Randomized Trial of Electronic vs. Face-to-Face Training in China

Anum Nisar, Juan Yin, Yiping Nan, Huanyuan Luo, Dongfang Han, Lei Yang, Jiaying Li, Duolao Wang, Atıf Rahman, Xiaomei Li

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Rates of perinatal depression in China are high. The Thinking Healthy Programme is a WHO-endorsed, evidence-based psychosocial intervention for perinatal depression, requiring five days of face-to-face training by a specialist trainer. Given the paucity of specialist trainers and logistical challenges, standardized training of large numbers of nurses is a major challenge for scaling up. We developed an electronic training programme (e-training) which eliminates the need for specialist-led, face-to-face training. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the e-training compared to conventional face-to-face training in nursing students. Methods: A single blind, non-inferiority, randomized controlled trial was conducted. One hundred nursing students from two nursing schools were randomly assigned to either e-training or conventional face-to-face training. Results: E-training was not inferior to specialist-led face-to-face training immediately post-training [mean ENhancing Assessment of Common Therapeutic factors (ENACT) score (M) 45.73, standard deviation (SD) 4.03 vs. M 47.08, SD 4.53; mean difference (MD) −1.35, 95% CI; (−3.17, 0.46), p = 0.14]. There was no difference in ENACT scores at three months [M = 42.16, SD 4.85 vs. M = 42.65, SD 4.65; MD = −0.481, 95% CI; (−2.35, 1.39), p = 0.61]. Conclusions: E-training is a promising tool with comparative effectiveness to specialist-led face-to-face training. E-training can be used for training of non-specialists for evidence-based psychosocial interventions at scale and utilized where there is a shortage of specialist trainers, but practice under supervision is necessary to maintain competence. However, continued practice under supervision may be necessary to maintain competence.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosocialTraining (meteorology)Intervention (counseling)Randomized controlled trialFace (sociological concept)Depression (economics)ChinaPsychologyFace-to-faceMedicineClinical psychologyPsychiatryPolitical scienceEconomicsPhysicsEpistemologyMacroeconomicsLawSocial scienceSurgeryPhilosophySociologyMeteorologyMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and PostpartumDigital Mental Health InterventionsMobile Health and mHealth Applications
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