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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12610000282088
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
1/04/2010
Date registered
8/04/2010
Date last updated
10/12/2015
Type of registration
Prospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
Enhancing the effects of the Positive Thinking Program: a longitudinal evaluation in 8-9 year old children
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Scientific title
A Longitudinal study of an enhanced Aussie Optimism: Positive Thinking Program in preventing internalising disorders in 8-9 year old children in Independent Goverment schools in Perth Metropolitan area.
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Secondary ID [1]
1511
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18931
Healthway
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
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Trial acronym
Aussie Optimism Program: Positive Thinking Skills (AOP:PTS)
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Mental Health
256992
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Condition category
Condition code
Mental Health
257145
257145
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0
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Depression
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Mental Health
257146
257146
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0
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Anxiety
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Public Health
257258
257258
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0
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Health promotion/education
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
Thirty primary schools will be selected from all the Independent Goverments and private schools in Perth Metropolitan area. They will be assigned at random to either the intervention or control condition. School principals will be invited to participate with the understanding that follow-up assessments will take place at post-test, 6 months and 18, months. A visit and presentation to each of the school principals and teachers involved in the implementation will then follow whereby the rationale and methodology are explained. This presentation will highlight the manner in which the program can be integrated into the regular school curriculum and will encourage individual teachers to become supporters and advocates for the program. The teachers will be trained in running groups and the principles of the "Positive Thinking" over a 1 day (8 hours) training course run by clinical psychologists who are members of the research team. The training workshop involves information, activity demonstrations, activity practice, feedback and implementation planning. Teachers in the intervention condition will be provided with programs manual and resources. The full involvement of Year 4 &5 teachers in the selected schools will be critical to the program's success so time will be taken to emphasize the benefits and outcomes for teachers. They will complete an implementation checklist after each session to assess program integrity. 5 x 1 hour coaching sessions will be offered with the intervention schools and teachers. Parents will be addressed as part of the usual parent teacher meetings that are held at the beginning of the year. This project will be fully explained and any questions that are raised will be answered. The active consent of children and parents will be sought after the study has been fully explained to them via school meetings and formal information and consent form.
In April 2010, the assessment battery will be administered to the children in the 15 intervention schools to provide baseline pre-test measures of depressive symptoms, attribution style, anxiety, demographic and emotional competence. At the same time, two trained psychologists will assess any child scoring over 17 on the Children's Depression Inventory (CDI) and 42 on the Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS) using The Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition(DSM-IV): Child version (ADIS-C). Follow-up times with the children will be organised in a confidential manner to avoid stigmatisation. For cases where depressive or anxiety disorders are identified, parents will be contacted, and the results of the assessment will be discussed with them. Identified children will be referred for psychological assistance if parents request this. The same procedure will be repeated at the 6 and 18 month follow-up intervals. And additional reply paid envelopes will be provided so that parents can seal their responses. After each follow-up session, a newsletter will be sent to parents and teachers thanking for their involvement, updating the progress, and collecting any changes of address information from parents.
The weekly intervention sessions will be run in the usual class room groups and the interview session will focus on confidentiality. The mixed sex groups will be conducted by teachers at the school at designated times that are convenient over 10 weekly one-hour sessions. Process measures for children will be administered at the conclusion of each session. The social validity of the program will be measured by the use of social acceptability questionnaires for all key stakeholders, children, parents, and teachers. The instruments that will be used are: 1) Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire (CASQ; Seligman et al.,1984), 2) CDI (Kovacs, 1992), 3) SCAS (Spence,1998), 4) The Assessment of Children's Emotional Skills (ACES; Schultz, Trentacosta, Izard, Leaf, & Mostow, 2004), 5) ADIS-C (Silverman & Albano, 1996), 6) The Extended Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaires (SDQ-P; Goodman, 1999), 7) Implementation Checklist assessing the degree that teachers have covered the specified information in AOP:PTS program and 8) Demographic information on socioeconomic status, ethnic origin, family structure, family health and history of mental health problems. Administration of the program will be closely monitored by the chief-investigators for adherence to assigned intervention program via log books, reports, interviews and observations made by research assistants and friendly follow-up sessions to help teachers get through the program and by addressing any problems that they might have. Dosage effects will be measured via attendance of students at session.
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Intervention code [1]
256168
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Prevention
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Intervention code [2]
256217
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Early detection / Screening
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Intervention code [3]
256218
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Diagnosis / Prognosis
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Comparator / control treatment
The control group will run their regular Health and Physical Education Curriculum as usual during the intervention period. Parents will be addressed as part of the usual parent teacher meetings that are held at the beginning of the year. This project will be fully explained and any questions that are raised will be answered. The active consent of children and parents will be sought after the study has been fully explained to them via school meetings and formal information and consent form.
In April 2010, the assessment battery will be administered to the children in the 15 control schools to provide baseline pre-test measures of depressive symptoms, attribution style, anxiety, demographic and emotional competence. At the same time, two trained psychologists will assess any child scoring over 17 on the CDI and 42 on the SCAS using the ADIS-C. Follow-up times with the children will be organised in a confidential manner to avoid stigmatisation. For cases where depressive or anxiety disorders are identified, parents will be confidentially contacted, and the results of the assessment will be discussed with them. Identified children will be referred for psychological assistance if parents request this. The same procedure will be repeated at the 6 and 18 month follow-up intervals. And additional reply paid envelope will be provided so that parents can seal their responses. After each follow-up session, a newsletter will be sent to parents and teachers thanking for their involvement, updating the progress, and collecting any changes of address information from parents. Process measures for children will be administered at the conclusion of each session. The instruments that will be used are: 1) CASQ (Seligman et al.,1984), 2) CDI (Kovacs, 1992), 3) SCAS (Spence,1998), 4) ACES; (Schultz, Trentacosta, Izard, Leaf, & Mostow, 2004), 5) ADIS-C (Silverman & Albano, 1996), 6) SDQ-P (Goodman, 1999) and 7) Demographic information on socioeconomic status, ethnic origin, family structure, family health and history of mental health problems.
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Control group
Active
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
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Primary outcome 1: The intervention group will report lower levels of depressive symptoms than the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the CDI.
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Assessment method [1]
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Timepoint [1]
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Timepoint: At post-test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18-month follow-ups.
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Primary outcome [2]
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Primary outcome 2: The intervention group will report lower levels of anxiety symptoms than the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the SCAS.
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Assessment method [2]
258091
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Timepoint [2]
258091
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Timepoint: At post-test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18-month follow-ups
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Secondary outcome [1]
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Secondary outcome 1: Parents in the intervention group will report lower levels of internalising and externalising symptomatology in their children than the parents in the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the SDQ-P.
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Assessment method [1]
263679
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Timepoint [1]
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Timepoint 1: At post-test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18-month follow-ups
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Secondary outcome [2]
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Secondary outcome 2: The intervention group will report a more positive attribution style than the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the CASQ.
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Assessment method [2]
263687
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Timepoint [2]
263687
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Timepoint 2: At post-test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18-month follow-ups
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Secondary outcome [3]
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Secondary outcome 3: The intervention group will report higher levels of emotional attribution accuracy than the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the ACES.
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Assessment method [3]
263688
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Timepoint [3]
263688
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Timepoint 3: At post-test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18-month follow-ups
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Secondary outcome [4]
263689
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Secondary outcome 4: The proportion of control group children diagnose as clinical will be significantly greater than the intervention group and this outcome will be assessed by the ADIS-C.
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Assessment method [4]
263689
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Timepoint [4]
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Time point 4: Pre (Baseline test) and post test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18 months after the intervention
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Secondary outcome [5]
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Secondary outcome 5: The proportion of intervention group children diagnose as healthy and remain healthy will significantly greater than the control group and this outcome will be assessed by the CDI and SCAS.
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Assessment method [5]
263690
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Timepoint [5]
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Timepoint 5: Pre (Baseline test) and post test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18 months follow-ups.
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Secondary outcome [6]
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Secondary outcome 6: Children who recieve a high dose of the program will report lower levels of internalising symptoms compared to children who receive a low-dose of the program and these outcomes will be assessed by the CDI and SCAS.
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Assessment method [6]
263691
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Timepoint [6]
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Timepoint 6:Post-test (at completion of 10-week intervention), 6 and 18 months follow-ups.
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Secondary outcome [7]
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Secondary outcome 7: Students, parents, and teachers will rate the program as socially acceptable and this outcome will be assessed by the Implementation Checklist.
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Assessment method [7]
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Timepoint [7]
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Timepoint 7: Pre (Baseline test) and post test (at completion of 10 week intervention), 6 and 18 months follow-ups.
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
The target population consists of Year 4 and 5 students from Independent Goverment and private schools in the Perth Metropolitan area. These schools are targeted because research has shown that private schools have the potential to engender a school culture through aspects such as bullying and pressure to achieve higher level standards that may challenge students' mental health (Watt, 2003). Power considerations dictated that we recruit relatively large schools that have access to about 150 Year 4 and 5 students. We will select these schools from the lower end of the Socioeconomic status (SES) scale. Although SES ratings for Independent Goverment and private schools tend to be relatively high compared to State Schools, students from lower SES private schools should still provide more scope for improvement on the outcome measures than students from higher SES private schools. The sampling strategies involves recruiting private schools with large numbers of Year 4 & 5s, and relatively low SES.
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Minimum age
8
Years
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Maximum age
9
Years
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Sex
Both males and females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
Yes
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Key exclusion criteria
Year 4 and 5 from public schools in Perth metropolitan area and surrounding surburbs.
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Prevention
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Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
Fifteen schools were randomly selected from the population of non-government schools in Western Australia (WA) which was dictated by considerations of statistical power, that the selected schools had at least 56 Grade 4 students and at least 38 Grade 5 students. Each of the 15 schools was then matched to another school from the population according to socio-economic status and the number of students in Grades 4 and 5. For each matched pair, one school was then randomly allocated to the intervention group and the other school was allocated to the control group.
Allocation concealment procedure was applied by computer central randomisation method.
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Simple randomisation by using a randomization table created by a computer software
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Masking / blinding
Open (masking not used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
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Intervention assignment
Parallel
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Other design features
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Completed
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
19/04/2010
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Actual
20/09/2010
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
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Actual
27/09/2013
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
1177
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Accrual to date
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Final
868
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Recruitment in Australia
Recruitment state(s)
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Recruitment postcode(s) [1]
2639
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6155
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Recruitment postcode(s) [2]
2640
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6059
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Recruitment postcode(s) [3]
2641
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6923
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Recruitment postcode(s) [4]
2642
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6955
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Recruitment postcode(s) [5]
2643
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6065
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Recruitment postcode(s) [6]
2644
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6024
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Recruitment postcode(s) [7]
2645
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6401
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Recruitment postcode(s) [8]
2646
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6028
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Recruitment postcode(s) [9]
2647
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6062
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Recruitment postcode(s) [10]
2648
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6026
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Recruitment postcode(s) [11]
2649
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6060
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Recruitment postcode(s) [12]
2650
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6530
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Recruitment postcode(s) [13]
2651
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6052
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Recruitment postcode(s) [14]
2652
0
6156
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Recruitment postcode(s) [15]
2653
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6231
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Recruitment postcode(s) [16]
2654
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6233
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Recruitment postcode(s) [17]
2655
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6110
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Recruitment postcode(s) [18]
2656
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6054
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Recruitment postcode(s) [19]
2657
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6100
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Recruitment postcode(s) [20]
2658
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6076
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Recruitment postcode(s) [21]
2659
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6531
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Recruitment postcode(s) [22]
2660
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6025
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Recruitment postcode(s) [23]
2661
0
6210
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Recruitment postcode(s) [24]
2662
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6941
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Recruitment postcode(s) [25]
2663
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6936
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Recruitment postcode(s) [26]
2664
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6164
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Recruitment postcode(s) [27]
2665
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6969
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Recruitment postcode(s) [28]
2666
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6018
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
256712
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Government body
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Name [1]
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Healthway
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Address [1]
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Healthway, PO Box 1284, West Perth WA 6872
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Country [1]
256712
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Australia
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Primary sponsor type
Individual
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Name
Dr. Rosie Rooney
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Address
School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987 Perth, WA 6845.
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Country
Australia
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
256000
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Individual
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Name [1]
256000
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Dr. Shari Hassan
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Address [1]
256000
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987 Perth, WA 6845.
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Country [1]
256000
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Australia
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Other collaborator category [1]
1168
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Individual
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Name [1]
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Associate Prof. Clare Roberts
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Address [1]
1168
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987 Perth, WA 6845.
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Country [1]
1168
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Australia
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Other collaborator category [2]
1171
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Individual
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Name [2]
1171
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Dr. Robert Kane
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Address [2]
1171
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987 Perth, WA 6845.
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Country [2]
1171
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Australia
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
258726
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Curtin University Human Research Ethics Committee
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Ethics committee address [1]
258726
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Curtin University Human Research Ethics Committee, c/- Office of Research and Development, Curtin University of Technology, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845
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Ethics committee country [1]
258726
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Australia
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
258726
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07/12/2009
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Approval date [1]
258726
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05/03/2010
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Ethics approval number [1]
258726
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165/2009
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Summary
Brief summary
The current project is a new efficacy trial to evaluate the enhanced version of the Aussie Optimism- Positive Thinking Skills Program (AOP-PTS). This research project builds on recent information about emotional competence and cognitive skills in the middle childhood period to promote and enhance mental health benefits for 8-9 year olds. The projected outcomes are: Children who received the enhanced version of AOP-PTS program in Year 4 and 5 will report lower levels of internalising symptomatology (anxiety and depressive symptoms) and negative attributional style at the post test, 6 and 18 months follow-up compared to the children in control condition.
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Trial website
http://psych.curtin.edu.au/research/aussieoptimism/
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Trial related presentations / publications
Kennedy, T. Rooney, R., Kane, R., & Hassan, S. (2015). The Enhanced Aussie Optimism Positive Thinking Skills Program: Assessing the relationship between internalising symptoms and family functioning in children aged 9-11 years of age. Frontiers in Psychology. 6:504.doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00504 Myles-Pallister, J, Hassan, S., Rooney, R, Kane, R, (2014). The efficacy of the Enhanced Aussie Optimism Positive Thinking Skills Program in improving social and emotional learning in middle childhood. Frontiers in Psychology 5 (909):1-11. Doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00909.
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Public notes
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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A/Prof Associate Prof. Rosie Rooney
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Address
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, Western Australia 6845
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Country
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Australia
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Phone
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+61 8 9266 3050 (Perth, WA)
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Fax
30957
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Email
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
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Dr. Rosie Rooney
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Address
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987,
Perth, Western Australia 6845
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Country
14204
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Australia
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Phone
14204
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+61 8 9266 3050 (Perth, WA)
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Fax
14204
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+61 8 9266 2464 (Perth, WA)
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Email
14204
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
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Robert Kane
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Address
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School of Psychology and Speech Pathology,
Curtin University of Technology,
GPO Box U1987,
Perth, Western Australia 6845
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Country
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Australia
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Phone
5132
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+61 8 9266 7992 (Perth, WA)
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Fax
5132
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+61 8 9266 2464 (Perth, WA)
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Email
5132
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[email protected]
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No information has been provided regarding IPD availability
What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
No documents have been uploaded by study researchers.
Documents added automatically
No additional documents have been identified.
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