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Sharing HaRT in New Expanses: Evaluating the Move With HaRT Intervention on Improving Mental Health of Human Trafficking Survivors
The goal of this parallel cluster randomized control (CRT) trial is to evaluate a group-based mind-body intervention (Move with HaRT) in survivors of human trafficking. The main study aims are: 1. Determine effectiveness of the Move with HaRT intervention on PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms among survivors of human trafficking in Uganda 2. Explore participant characteristics (e.g., age, trafficking history, food security) that may moderate the intervention effectiveness. 3. Understand potential barriers and facilitators to future implementation and scale-up. Participants will complete: * Complete three surveys (baseline, endline, and 3 month follow-up) * Participate in either Services as Usual or Move with HaRT groups * Qualitative in-depth interviews Researchers will compare Move with HaRT with Services as Usual to see effects on mental health symptoms.
Despite significant mental health challenges experienced by human trafficking survivors, a lack of research on effective interventions exists. The proposed parallel cluster randomized control trial aims to evaluate the mental health impact of Move with HaRT with human trafficking survivors in Uganda. Move with HaRT is a group-based intervention facilitated by paraprofessionals that includes breathwork, yoga poses, meditation, and discussions. The proposed study will use a parallel cluster randomized control (CRT) trial with 302 survivors randomized in groups to either Move with HaRT or Services as Usual. The main study aims are: 1) Determine effectiveness of the Move with HaRT intervention on PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptoms among survivors of human trafficking in Uganda; 2) Explore participant characteristics (e.g., age, trafficking history, food security) that may moderate the intervention effectiveness; 3) Understand potential barriers and facilitators to future implementation and scale-up. Surveys at baseline, endline, and 3-month follow-up assess mental health outcomes, as well as secondary outcomes on physical and social wellbeing. Qualitative research will inform barriers and facilitators to future implementation and scale-up. Results of this study have the potential to inform protection services in Uganda and beyond.
Age
14 - No limit years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Innovations for Poverty Action, Uganda
Kampala, Uganda
Start Date
August 21, 2023
Primary Completion Date
February 1, 2025
Completion Date
May 1, 2025
Last Updated
February 1, 2024
302
ESTIMATED participants
Move with HaRT
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Collaborators
NCT04123314
NCT06574035
Data Source & Attribution
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