BMC Psychiatry
BMC Psychiatry
BMC Psychiatry
BioMed Central
Open Access
Research article
Mental health first aid training of the public in a rural area: a cluster
randomized trial [ISRCTN53887541]
Anthony F Jorm*1, Betty A Kitchener1, Richard O'Kearney2 and
Keith BG Dear1
Address: 1Centre for Mental Health Research, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia and 2School of Psychology, Australian
National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Email: Anthony F Jorm* - [email protected]; Betty A Kitchener - [email protected];
Richard O'Kearney - [email protected]; Keith BG Dear - [email protected]
* Corresponding author
doi:10.1186/1471-244X-4-33
Abstract
Background: A Mental Health First Aid course has been developed which trains members of the
public in how to give initial help in mental health crisis situations and to support people developing
mental health problems. This course has previously been evaluated in a randomized controlled trial
in a workplace setting and found to produce a number of positive effects. However, this was an
efficacy trial under relatively ideal conditions. Here we report the results of an effectiveness trial
in which the course is given under more typical conditions.
Methods: The course was taught to members of the public in a large rural area in Australia by staff
of an area health service. The 16 Local Government Areas that made up the area were grouped
into pairs matched for size, geography and socio-economic level. One of each Local Government
Area pair was randomised to receive immediate training while one served as a wait-list control.
There were 753 participants in the trial: 416 in the 8 trained areas and 337 in the 8 control areas.
Outcomes measured before the course started and 4 months after it ended were knowledge of
mental disorders, confidence in providing help, actual help provided, and social distance towards
people with mental disorders. The data were analysed taking account of the clustered design and
using an intention-to-treat approach.
Results: Training was found to produce significantly greater recognition of the disorders,
increased agreement with health professionals about which interventions are likely to be helpful,
decreased social distance, increased confidence in providing help to others, and an increase in help
actually provided. There was no change in the number of people with mental health problems that
trainees had contact with nor in the percentage advising someone to seek professional help.
Conclusions: Mental Health First Aid training produces positive changes in knowledge, attitudes
and behaviour when the course is given to members of the public by instructors from the local
health service.
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Background
Community surveys have shown that the public in many
countries have poor mental health literacy [1]. Many people cannot recognise mental disorders correctly, they differ from mental health professionals in their beliefs about
causes and the most effective treatments, and they have
stigmatizing attitudes which hinder recognition and
appropriate help-seeking. This lack of mental health literacy limits the uptake of evidence-based treatments and
leads to lack of support for people with mental disorders
from others in the community.
To help improve mental health literacy, a Mental Health
First Aid training course has been developed. This course
uses the first aid model that has been successfully applied
to training members of the public to help in accidents and
emergencies [2]. The Mental Health First Aid course is
designed to give skills to provide initial help in mental
health crisis situations and for on-going mental health
problems. The course teaches a five-step approach to first
aid: 1. Assess risk of suicide or harm, 2. Listen non-judgmentally, 3. Give reassurance and information, 4. Encourage person to get appropriate professional help, and 5.
Encourage self-help strategies. These steps are applied to
depression, anxiety disorders, psychosis and substance
use disorders. In addition, participants are given specific
instruction on how to help in the following mental health
crisis situations: a suicidal person, a person having a panic
attack, a person who has experienced a traumatic event,
and a psychotic person threatening violence.
An initial uncontrolled evaluation of the course involved
comparing the first 210 participants at the beginning and
end of the course, and at 6 months follow-up [3]. The
course was found to produce improvement in ability to
recognize a mental disorder in a case vignette, to change
beliefs about treatment to be more like those of health
professionals, to decrease social distance from people
with mental disorders, to improve confidence in providing help to others, and to increase the amount of help
actually provided.
The next stage in the evaluation of Mental Health First Aid
involved a randomized controlled trial with 301 employees of two large government departments [4]. Participants
were assigned to either receive the course immediately or
were placed on a wait-list for 5 months and received the
training after the trial was completed. The trial found a
number of benefits, including greater confidence in providing help to others, greater likelihood of advising people to seek professional help, improved concordance with
health professionals about treatments, and decreased
social distance from people with mental disorders. A surprising finding was that the course improved the mental
health of the participants themselves, even though they
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Methods
The details of this trial have been reported according to
the CONSORT statement for cluster randomized trials [7].
Participants
Eligible participants were residents of the catchment area
of the New South Wales (Australia) Southern Area Health
Service who were over 17 years of age, who volunteered
for training in response to publicity, who were available
over the period of the trial, and who were willing to
receive interviews assessing trial outcomes. Participants
had to volunteer as individuals rather than as a group (e.g.
a whole workplace). Publicity took the form of talks to
community groups, newspaper ads, a press release and
radio interviews.
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Eligible clusters were the 16 Local Government Areas (cities or shires) in the catchment area of the Southern Area
Health Service in 2003. This catchment is located in
south-east New South Wales, runs approximately 370 km
from north to south and approximately 160 km from east
to west, and had a population of 194,435 in 2001. The
Local Government Areas varied from popular coastal
areas to farming communities to rural towns and ranged
in population size from less than 5000 to over 50,000.
Intervention
Participants received a nine-hour Mental Health First Aid
course, in three weekly sessions of three hours each. Training was administered in the local area in groups of up to
25 participants, with a minimum of 10 participants per
course. As documentation of the intervention, there is a
lesson plan for each session and a participants' manual
containing material that was given to take away [2]. All
instructors were given training and a teaching kit of lesson
plans, videos, books, master copies of handouts and a set
of transparencies. Educators received a one-week training
program in how to conduct Mental Health First Aid
courses and subsequent supervision in running a course.
They were trained by Betty Kitchener who devised the
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All outcomes were measured at the individual level by telephone interview. The interview content was based on the
questionnaire used in the uncontrolled trial of Mental
Health First Aid [3]. The pre-test interview covered the following: whether the participant had ever experienced a
mental health problem (yes/no), whether a family member had ever experienced a mental health problem (yes/
no), the participant's confidence in helping someone
(five-point scale from 1. not at all to 5. extremely), contact
in the last six months with anyone with a mental health
problem (yes/no), how many people, whether any help
offered (yes/no), what type of help (open-ended question), recognition of the problem in a case vignette (randomly assigned to be a case of depression or one of
schizophrenia), what participant would do to help if they
knew the person in the vignette (this "mental health first
aid intention" involved the presence or absence of 8 elements, arrived at by a qualitative analysis of a sample of
the responses, and added up to give a scorefrom 08), ratings of the likely helpfulness of a range of interventions
for the person in the vignette (scored to give a scale of percentage agreement with mental health professionals
about treatment [3]), a social distance scale relating to the
person in the vignette [8], whether the participant had
had a problem like the one in the vignette, whether a family member had had a problem like the one in the
vignette, participant's reason for doing the course, and
sociodemographic characteristics of the participant (age,
gender, education, non-English speaking background,
aboriginality). The follow-up questionnaire was the same
as the pre-test questionnaire except that it omitted the
sociodemographic questions.
All outcomes were measured by a scripted telephone
interview administered by professional interviewers. In
order to reduce the length of the interview, participants
were individually randomly assigned to receive either a
depression vignette or a schizophrenia vignette, with the
same questions asked in respect to each vignette. The
interviewers were provided with an ID, name and phone
number of each participant and knew whether they were
giving the first or second interview to the participant.
While they were not told whether the participant was in
the experimental or control group, information about
which group they were assigned to was given at the end of
the interview script. As far as was practical given the very
different sizes of the Local Government Area pairs, the
same interviewers interviewed participants in each pair.
Sample size determination
For power calculations and sample size determination, a
conservative assumption was made that the waitlist control group would show improvements, possibly due to
increased awareness of mental health issues, of about
50% of that of the experimental group. This corresponds
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Each individual participant was randomly assigned a variable (values of 1 or 2) to determine which case vignette
they received during their interviews. This was done using
the Random Integers option of Random.org [10]. Those
assigned a 1 received the interview based on a vignette of
a person who is depressed and those assigned 2 received a
vignette of a person with schizophrenia.
Randomization: Allocation concealment
Allocation was on the basis of cluster. In other words, the
participant's Local Government Area determined whether
they received immediate or wait-list training. Participants
were not informed about their allocation to immediate or
wait-list training until the end of their baseline interview.
Randomization: implementation
Local Government Areas were matched in pairs and
Anthony Jorm assigned these randomly to immediate
training or wait-list. Participants were not able to attend a
class from outside their own Local Government Area.
There was a recruitment period for all Local Government
Areas which was organized by the coordinator Karen
Peterson. The coordinator and the participants who were
recruited were blind to the allocation of the Local Government Area during the recruitment period. Anthony Jorm
revealed the allocation to Karen Peterson after the recruitment period ended. Karen Peterson then organized class
times either immediately or after a waiting period,
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Numbers analyzed
The data were analyzed by an intention-to-treat approach,
with single imputation used for missing data. As shown in
Figure 2, the number of participants analyzed was the
same as the number randomly allocated.
Outcomes and estimation
Tables 2 and 3 show the changes found for the dichotomous and continuous outcome measures respectively and
the P-value of the comparison between the Mental Health
First Aid and control group on these changes. From pretest to follow-up a significantly larger percentage of the
Mental Health First Aid group than the control group
changed from not reporting experiencing a mental health
problem to reporting experiencing one, from incorrectly
to correctly diagnosing the case vignette and from reporting not offering help to a person with a mental health
problem to reporting offering help. The Mental Health
First Aid group changed significantly more than the control group in their agreement with health professional
about treatment, in the degree of reduction in reported
social distance from the person in the vignette and in their
confidence in providing help.
Results
Discussion
This study has found that the Mental Health First Aid
training produced a number of significant changes in participants compared to a wait-list control group. A number
of changes related to how people responded to a vignette
of a person with either depression or schizophrenia. We
found that there was greater recognition of the disorders
in a vignettes, increased agreement with health professionals about which interventions are likely to be helpful,
decreased social distance towards the people portrayed in
the vignettes. These changes were seen equally with both
vignettes. There was also a non-significant trend for those
in the trained group to have more ideas for how to help
the person in the vignette if it had been someone they
knew.
Baseline data
Table 1 shows the characteristics of each group at the cluster and individual level. The two groups appear to be well
matched in terms of sociodemographic characteristics and
in history of mental health problems in self and family.
However, there was a significant difference in reason for
doing the course, with more people in the control group
doing it for work reasons.
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Enrolment
Allocation
Allocated to wait-list
337 individuals, 8 clusters of size 8, 9, 12,
16, 28, 50, 53, and 161.
Analyzed
416 individuals, 8 clusters
Analyzed
337 individuals, 8 clusters
Analysis
Follow-up
Figure
Flow
diagram
2
of the number of participants and clusters at each stage of the trial
Flow diagram of the number of participants and clusters at each stage of the trial.
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Table 1: Baseline characteristics for each group given at the individual and cluster levels.
Control group
3
2
1
1
1
9,17,18,29,30,48,100,165
3
1
2
0
2
8,9,12,16,28,50,53,161
416
47.14
79 (19.0)
85 (20.6)
11 (2.6)
5 (1.2)
337
47.97
57 (16.9)
81 (24.1)
10 (3.0)
7 (2.1)
180 (43.3)
56 (13.5)
20 (4.8)
49 (11.8)
111 (26.7)
188 (55.8)
29 (8.6)
10 (3.0)
44 (13.1)
66 (19.6)
P-value
1.0
0.42
0.40
0.36
0.40
0.12
0.011
Outcome
Mental health problems in self
Pre-test
Follow-up
Change (95% CI)
Mental health problems in family
Pre-test
Follow-up
Change (95% CI)
Correct diagnosis of vignette
Pre-test
Follow-up
Change (95% CI)
Help offered to person with mental health problem
Pre-test
Follow-up
Change (95% CI)
Professional help advised to person with mental health
problem
Pre-test
Follow-up
Change (95% CI)
Control group
154 (37%)
172 (41%)
4% (2 to 6)
118 (35%)
118 (35%)
0% (-3 to 3)
233 (56%)
277 (67%)
11% (4 to 17)
183 (54%)
205 (61%)
7% (2 to 11)
282 (68%)
337 (81%)
13% (8 to 19)
249 (74%)
255 (76%)
2% (0 to 4)
305 (73%)
340 (82%)
8% (4 to 13)
256 (76%)
270 (80%)
4% (-2 to 10)
81 (19%)
104 (25%)
6% (3 to 8)
71 (21%)
73 (22%)
1% (-4 to 5)
Note: P-values and confidence intervals are adjusted for clustering by Local Government Area
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Outcome
Control group
60.55 (3.89)
74.74 (1.91)
14.19 (9.53 to 18.85)
69.46 (2.18)
70.81 (2.27)
1.35 (-6.04 to 8.75)
8.13 (0.24)
7.59 (0.17)
-0.53 (-0.99 to -0.08)
8.06 (0.13)
7.90 (0.20)
-0.17 (-0.41 to 0.07)
1.81 (0.04)
1.83 (0.03)
0.02 (-0.11 to 0.15)
1.88 (0.04)
1.85 (0.07)
-0.03 (-0.15 to 0.08)
3.13 (0.08)
3.39 (0.05)
0.27 (0.11 to 0.42)
3.17 (0.07)
3.21 (0.07)
0.04 (-0.02 to 0.11)
3.97 (0.31)
3.89 (0.30)
-0.08 (-0.64 to 0.49)
4.56 (0.20)
4.34 (0.29)
-0.22 (-0.83 to 0.40)
Note: Standard errors of the mean (SEM), confidence intervals and P-values are adjusted for clustering by Local Government Area
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approaches to missing data even when the missing-at-random assumption is not met [12].
Since this and the earlier trials were started, the Mental
Health First Aid course has been extended from 9 to 12
hours on the basis of consistent requests from trainees for
a longer course. The longer course does not add new content, but rather extends the time available to deal with
each topic. We have yet to evaluate whether this extension
adds to the effectiveness of the training.
Conclusions
A nine-hour Mental Health First Aid training produces
positive changes in knowledge, attitudes and behavior
when the course is given to members of the public by
instructors from the local health service. This finding
shows that the effects of the course are generalizable
beyond its originators and when run under typical
conditions.
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and Dr Ian White Director of the Southern Area Health Promotion Unit
for assisting with organisation support for the trial, and to the five instructors: Len Kanowski, Jennie Lampard, Tina Philip, Karen Peterson and Tracie
Storay. Funding was provided by the Health Promotion Demonstration
Research Grants Scheme from the New South Wales Department of
Health, a National Health and Medical Research Council Research Fellowship and Program Grant, and a grant from ACT Health and Community
Care.
References
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Competing interests
BAK and AFJ were the developers of the Mental Health
First Aid course.
7.
8.
Authors' contributions
AFJ was involved in securing funding for the study, had a
major role in the design of the study, co-developed the
evaluation questionnaire, contributed to the data analysis
and had a major role in writing the manuscript.
BAK was involved in securing funding for the study, developed and taught the Mental Health First Aid Instructor
course, had a role in the design of the study, co-developed
the evaluation questionnaire, organized the outcome
assessment and had a minor role in writing the
manuscript.
ROK was involved in securing funding for the study, had
a role in the design of the study, had a major role in planning and managing the trial's implementation in its initial
stages, recruited and supervised the study staff, established and maintained organisational support in the
Southern Area, and had a role in the writing of the
manuscript.
KBGD had a major role in the data analysis and a minor
role in writing the manuscript.
All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
9.
10.
11.
12.
Pre-publication history
The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed
here:
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/4/33/pre
pub
Acknowledgements
BioMedcentral
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