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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06425523
NA

Transforming Health and Resilience in Vulnerable Environments: Mental Health, Psychosocial Support, and Climate-Smart Farming in Nakivale

Sponsor: Uppsala University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The study aims to evaluate if enhancing the mental health of refugee mothers can make them better able to implement new farming methods that are meant to improve food security in the face of climate change. It is a cluster-randomized controlled trial involving 900 pairs consisting of refugee mothers and their children aged 36-59 months, living in Nakivale refugee settlement in Uganda. The mothers will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: * Control group: Mothers will receive Enhanced Usual Care (EUC). * HGI group: Mothers will receive the Home Gardening Intervention, consisting of training and supplies for home gardening. * HGI/SH+ group: Mothers will receive both the Home Gardening Intervention and the Self-Help Plus mental health intervention. The main goal is to see if the gardening program alone can reduce food insecurity after 12 months compared to the EUC control group. It also aims to see if reducing psychological distress by adding the mental health component boosts the effects of the gardening intervention. Secondary goals are to look at impacts on dietary diversity, child malnutrition, and mothers' mental health levels across all three groups. The study also gathers survey data on participant mothers' migration history, social capital, exposure to potentially traumatic events, exposure to natural hazards and environmental stressors, mental health, and parenting style. Both mothers and their children will furthermore play incentivized economic games to measure their economic preferences (time, risk, social preferences). Additionally, the study will assess children's well-being and functioning. Children will also be asked to carry out gamified tasks designed to measure their cognitive development.

Official title: Strengthening Resilience to Climate Change by Improving Mental Health: Evidence from a Randomized Intervention in Southwestern Uganda

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

904

Start Date

2024-12-13

Completion Date

2026-12

Last Updated

2025-01-28

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Home Gardening Intervention (HGI)

The Home Gardening Intervention (HGI) provides refugee participants with agricultural inputs and training (field prep., sowing, water management, pest control, weeding, etc.) through a participatory field school approach with a curriculum derived from best practices in agro-ecology. The program includes active monitoring during a 12-month period. The training involves nutrition education on cooking methods and the importance of dietary diversity using garden produce as well as guidance on surplus management and market support. The overall goal of the intervention is to enable climate-resilient farming for improved food security and dietary diversity that is sustainable long-term.

BEHAVIORAL

Self-Help Plus (SH+)

Self-Help Plus (SH+) is a 5-session group intervention developed by the WHO and based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, delivered by trained local facilitators. It provides tools to manage stress and adversity through pre-recorded audio lessons and a self-help book. Sessions include individual exercises and group discussions. SH+ aims to decrease psychological distress. It has shown effectiveness among refugees in Uganda and elsewhere.

BEHAVIORAL

Enhanced Usual Care (EUC)

The Enhanced Usual Care (EUC) control condition involves a single 15-minute psychoeducation session providing information on managing overthinking and utilizing available mental health services in the settlement. These services include psychosocial support from community health workers and clinical mental health services (counseling and medications) provided weekly at local primary care centers by a visiting team.

Locations (1)

Kabale University

Kabale, Western Region, Uganda