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Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a fully self-guided internet-based intervention for sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms: protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a fully self-guided internet-based intervention for sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a fully self-guided internet-based intervention for sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Design and objective: this paper describes the protocol for a large-scale pragmatic, randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation to investigate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the self-directed E-Couch social anxiety module versus a waiting list control condition, for reducing sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms in the general population.

Study population: community-based adults (aged 18+) with social anxiety symptoms that do not meet the criteria for social anxiety disorder recruited via a direct-to-consumer advertisement on national websites.

Intervention and control: intervention is the self-guided E-Couch social anxiety module. Control group participants are placed on a waiting list to receive the intervention at the end of the trial. Both groups receive email and text message reminders.

Outcome measures: the primary outcome will be change in self-reported social anxiety score using the Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN). Secondary outcomes will be the changes in the following self-report measures: Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation scale (BFNE-S); depression (CES-D); mental wellbeing (SWEMWEBS); health status (SF36); use of health services; safety events; and adherence, retention, and attrition rates. All measures will be administered at baseline, 6 weeks, and 3, 6 and 12 months.

Analysis: a mixed effects model will be used to analyse the effect of the intervention on the primary and secondary outcomes (intention to treat analysis). Secondary analyses will explore moderators and mediators of effect. A prospective economic evaluation, conducted from a NHS and social care perspective, will provide estimates of cost utility and cost-effectiveness. An interview study will be conducted with 20 participants to explore issues including acceptability, adherence, retention and attrition.
2055-2076
Powell, John
0616c5bf-0ce6-48ef-9b89-45a72529beb1
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Williams, Veronika
a5c359ae-4926-4273-a0f5-bbaa3bb00fc3
Martin, Angela
424ac7b5-4e3d-4157-aeeb-0408f0c6dede
Bennett, Kylie
e04bd1ff-d840-4cb8-8e1b-f02cb4fcb13c
Bennett, Anthony
1f2add29-88d0-45d0-a42b-4f57144f966f
Mollison, Jill
555564a2-d739-4725-aea0-74d6c89c5740
Yu, Ly-Mee
ae5bebd5-e49c-4fb1-ada1-a7d669f8a87f
Yang, Yaling
584927df-47c5-4345-8386-1b3d4ec860fb
Locock, Louise
5a386f03-e28a-4db8-bfb3-fc46b1e6dccd
Davoudianfar, Mina
19ba5ffd-b4f5-480e-ba2b-1900ca947a16
Griffiths, Kathleen M.
8dc2d8a2-9b92-4d98-8f49-681a2398b1a8
Powell, John
0616c5bf-0ce6-48ef-9b89-45a72529beb1
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Williams, Veronika
a5c359ae-4926-4273-a0f5-bbaa3bb00fc3
Martin, Angela
424ac7b5-4e3d-4157-aeeb-0408f0c6dede
Bennett, Kylie
e04bd1ff-d840-4cb8-8e1b-f02cb4fcb13c
Bennett, Anthony
1f2add29-88d0-45d0-a42b-4f57144f966f
Mollison, Jill
555564a2-d739-4725-aea0-74d6c89c5740
Yu, Ly-Mee
ae5bebd5-e49c-4fb1-ada1-a7d669f8a87f
Yang, Yaling
584927df-47c5-4345-8386-1b3d4ec860fb
Locock, Louise
5a386f03-e28a-4db8-bfb3-fc46b1e6dccd
Davoudianfar, Mina
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Griffiths, Kathleen M.
8dc2d8a2-9b92-4d98-8f49-681a2398b1a8

Powell, John, Atherton, Helen, Williams, Veronika, Martin, Angela, Bennett, Kylie, Bennett, Anthony, Mollison, Jill, Yu, Ly-Mee, Yang, Yaling, Locock, Louise, Davoudianfar, Mina and Griffiths, Kathleen M. (2017) Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a fully self-guided internet-based intervention for sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms: protocol for a randomised controlled trial. Digital Health, 3. (doi:10.1177/2055207617702272).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Design and objective: this paper describes the protocol for a large-scale pragmatic, randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation to investigate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the self-directed E-Couch social anxiety module versus a waiting list control condition, for reducing sub-clinical social anxiety symptoms in the general population.

Study population: community-based adults (aged 18+) with social anxiety symptoms that do not meet the criteria for social anxiety disorder recruited via a direct-to-consumer advertisement on national websites.

Intervention and control: intervention is the self-guided E-Couch social anxiety module. Control group participants are placed on a waiting list to receive the intervention at the end of the trial. Both groups receive email and text message reminders.

Outcome measures: the primary outcome will be change in self-reported social anxiety score using the Social Phobia Inventory (SPIN). Secondary outcomes will be the changes in the following self-report measures: Brief Fear of Negative Evaluation scale (BFNE-S); depression (CES-D); mental wellbeing (SWEMWEBS); health status (SF36); use of health services; safety events; and adherence, retention, and attrition rates. All measures will be administered at baseline, 6 weeks, and 3, 6 and 12 months.

Analysis: a mixed effects model will be used to analyse the effect of the intervention on the primary and secondary outcomes (intention to treat analysis). Secondary analyses will explore moderators and mediators of effect. A prospective economic evaluation, conducted from a NHS and social care perspective, will provide estimates of cost utility and cost-effectiveness. An interview study will be conducted with 20 participants to explore issues including acceptability, adherence, retention and attrition.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 February 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 April 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487251
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487251
ISSN: 2055-2076
PURE UUID: 4d3f53ed-f1d6-463f-b8cf-c8629c33043e
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 15:23
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: John Powell
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Veronika Williams
Author: Angela Martin
Author: Kylie Bennett
Author: Anthony Bennett
Author: Jill Mollison
Author: Ly-Mee Yu
Author: Yaling Yang
Author: Louise Locock
Author: Mina Davoudianfar
Author: Kathleen M. Griffiths

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