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Most mental health disorders have onset in childhood and adolescence (1). Depression, anxiety, and behavioural disorders such as attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) collectively affect 15% to 20% of youngsters (2). Unresolved mental health problems lead to learning problems, decreased academic performance, more truancy and dropping out, and special education referral (3). Early identification and early effective intervention can improve short- and long-term outcomes (4–7). However, available data indicate that most youngsters with treatable mental disorders are not correctly identified and not appropriately treated (8–11). Stigma surrounding mental illness remains a significant barrier to help-seeking behaviour, case recognition, and effective treatment (12,13). Dispelling stigma requires community education programs, including school programs, that improve early recognition of the problem, that encourage early help-seeking behaviour, and that create a supportive environment for the individual (14). Extracurricular inter- ventions in elementary schools have been found to decrease the use of special education and conduct problems, to improve academic skills, and to increase positive peer interactions and parent involvement in school (15). Our project assessed the feasibility of incorporating a mental health curriculum at the elementary level to be taught by schoolteachers. We describe the development, delivery, and short-term impact of this pilot project on children’s knowledge and attitudes. We chose a francophone rural community within a predominantly anglophone province because the community has less access to valid mental health information. MethodSample Procedure The teachers attended a full-day training workshop at the September 2001 professional development day. The project’s main objectives, the students’ key learning objectives, and the curriculum were detailed. We obtained written consent of parents or guardians prior to students’ participation in the curriculum. Local committee members played a critical role in obtaining consent by addressing hesitant parents’ concerns regarding this controversial subject. The teachers implemented the curriculum in 4 hourly sessions each week for 16 weeks, replacing the usual health program. We assessed students’ baseline and postintervention knowledge and attitudes, using age-appropriate individual questionnaires (Grades 4 to 7) containing self-rated and objective assessments of knowledge and attitudes, and by leading focus group discussions (Grades 1 to 7). We repeated baseline assessments of students’ knowledge and attitudes 1 to 2 weeks postcurriculum. Committee members led midcurriculum discussions with teachers and a postcurriculum discussion with teachers and parents to explore observed changes in students’ knowledge and attitudes. An independent evaluator compiled and analyzed the data. The Curriculum ResultsGrades 1 to 3 Grades 4 to 7 Postcurriculum questionnaires revealed that most students (80% to 89%) self-rated their knowledge of 4 aspects of mental health and mental illness as improved or much improved. Postcurriculum response rates to all questions were significantly higher than at baseline (when nonresponses were common). Further, significantly more correct responses (chi-square tests, P < 0.05) were obtained postcurriculum in questions probing the following facts regarding anxiety and ADHD: the occurrence of these disorders in children, the recovery of people with these disorders, characteristic symptoms, and appropriate actions to take when symptoms are recognized. Knowledge of anxiety and ADHD prevalence rates did not change significantly. Prevalence (unpaired t-test, P < 0.05) was the only aspect of knowledge about depression that showed statistically significant improvement. Compared with baseline, significantly more students responded and agreed that it was important to know about each of the disorders (chi-square tests, P < 0.05). Likewise, significantly more students at postcurriculum indicated that they would befriend someone with either anxiety or ADHD than indicated at baseline, and fewer students indicated that they would not befriend such a person. The only tested attitude that did not show change was whether students would befriend someone with depression. This null result was attributable partly to compassionate attitudes being fairly common at baseline but also to some residual stigma surrounding depression. Teachers’ Midcurriculum Feedback Parents’ Feedback DiscussionWe examined the implementation feasibility of a mental health curriculum in a linguistically and geographically isolated francophone community in Nova Scotia by assessing the short-term impact on elementary schoolchildren’s (Grades 1 to 7) knowledge and attitudes regarding mental health and common mental illnesses. Involving local community members in the project from start to finish was critical to the project’s success. Cooperation of the school staff was excellent. We obtained objective, subjective, and anecdotal evidence indicating improvements in knowledge and attitudes of students in Grades 4 to 7, particularly regarding anxiety and ADHD. We also observed improved knowledge of help-seeking behaviour strategies (in students Grades 4 to 7). We observed qualitative indications that, with increasing age across all 7 grades, children were more reluctant to ask for help, more inhibited when discussing their emotions, and more inclined to harbour negative baseline attitudes about mental health disorders. If school programs on mental health were started at entry level, attitudes of stigma could be lessened. Long-term goals are to incorporate mental health information into regular school curricula, along with an expanded school-based mental health service (16,17), primary care education, and (or) other care continua where children would have ready access to appropriate resources. AcknowledgementsThis project was sponsored by Health Canada through the Population Health Fund, Rural and Remote Innovations Initiative (project # 6788-03-2000/1890023). References1. Giaconia RM, Reinherz HZ, Silverman AB, Pakiz B, Frost AK, Cohen E. Ages of onset of psychiatric disorders in a community population of older adolescents. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1994;33:706–16. 2. Shaffer D, Fisher P, Dulcan MK, Davies M, Piacentini J, Schwab-Stone ME, and others. The NIMH diagnostic interview schedule for children. Version 2.3 (DISC-2.3): description, acceptability, prevalence rates, and performance in the MECA study. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1996;35:865–77. 3. Adelman HS, Taylor L. Mental health in schools and system restructuring. Clin Psychol Rev 1999;19:137–63. 4. Casey RJ, Berman JS. The outcome of psychotherapy with children. Psychol Bull 1985;98:388–400. 5. Kazdin AE, Weisz JR. Identifying and developing empirically supported child and adolescent treatments. J Consult Clinical Psychol 1998;66:19–36. 6. Ryan ND. Child and adolescent depression: short-term treatment effectiveness and long-term opportunities. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 2003;12(1):44–53. 7. Weisz JR, Weiss B, Han SS, Granger DA, Morton T. Effects of psychotherapy with children and adolescents revisited: a meta-analysis of treatment outcome studies. Psychol Bull 1995;117:450–68. 8. Surgeon General’s Report on Mental Health. Available: http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/topics/cmh/default.htm. Accessed 2002 June (updated May 27, 2003). 9. Bijl RV, de Graaf R, Hiripi E, Kessler RC, Kohn R, Offord DR, and others. Health Aff (Millwood). The prevalence of treated and untreated mental disorders in five countries 2003;22:122–33. 10. McCarthy J, Boyd J. Mental health services and young people with intellectual disability: is it time to do better? J Intellect Disabil Res 2002;46:250–6 (part 3). 11. National Institute of mental health. Available: http://www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/childnotes.cfm. Accessed 2002 June (updated October 2003). 12. Starr S, Campbell LR, Herrick CA. Factors affecting use of the mental health system by rural children. Issues Ment Health Nurs 2002;23:291–304. 13. Wahl OF. Mental health consumers’ experience of stigma. Schizophr Bull 1999;25:467–78. 14. Health Canada. A report on mental illnesses in Canada. Ottawa: Health Canada; 2002. Mental illnesses in Canada: an overview (chapter 1). Available: www.hc-sc.gc.ca/pphb-dgspsp/publicat/miic-mmac. Accessed 2002 June. 15. American Psychological Association. School-based interventions with successful academic outcomes 2003. Available: http://mirror.apa.org/ppo/issues/pschoolbased.html Accessed 2003 July. 16. Flaherty LT, Weist MD. School-based mental health services: the Baltimore models. Psychology in the Schools 1999;36:379–89. 17. Noam GG, Hermann CA. Where education and mental health meet: developmental prevention and early intervention in schools. Dev Psychopathol 2002;14:861–75. Author(s)Manuscript received March 2003, revised, and accepted June 2003. Previously presented in part at the 3rd International Forum of Mood and Anxiety Disorders; November 27 to 29, 2002; Monte Carlo. Previously presented in part at the Association Canadienne d’Éducation de Langue Française; October 2002; Halifax (NS). Previously presented in part at the Mental Health Conference; October 4, 2001; Moncton (NB). 1. Lecturer, Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. 2. Professor and Head, Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. 3. Research Associate, Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Address for correspondence: Dr BA Lauria-Horner, Lecturer, Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS B3H 2E2. e-mail: hornerb@is.dal.ca
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