TY - JOUR
T1 - A feasibility study of a preventative, transdiagnostic intervention for mental health problems in adolescence
T2 - Building resilience through socioemotional training (ReSET)
AU - Lloyd, Alex
AU - Law, Roslyn
AU - Midgley, Nick
AU - Wu, Tom
AU - Lucas, Laura
AU - Atkinson, Erin
AU - Steinbeis, Nikolaus
AU - Martin, Peter
AU - Veenstra, René
AU - Smith, Jaime
AU - Ly, Lili
AU - Bird, Geoffrey
AU - Murphy, Jennifer
AU - Plans, David
AU - Munafò, Marcus
AU - Penton-Voak, Ian
AU - Deighton, Jessica
AU - Richards, Kathleen
AU - Richards, Mya
AU - Fearon, Pasco
AU - Viding, Essi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/3/22
Y1 - 2025/3/22
N2 - Background: Adolescence is a developmental period during which an estimated 75% of mental health problems emerge (Solmi et al. in Mol Psychiat 27:281–295, 2022). This paper reports a feasibility study of a novel indicated, preventative, transdiagnostic, school-based intervention: Building Resilience Through Socioemotional Training (ReSET). The intervention addresses two domains thought to be causally related to mental health problems during adolescence: social relationships and emotion processing. Social relationships were targeted using principles from interpersonal psychotherapy, while emotion processing was targeted using cognitive-emotional training focused on three areas of emotion processing: Emotion perception, emotion regulation and interoception. The aims of this feasibility study were to (i) assess the acceptability of integrating group-based psychotherapy with individual cognitive-emotional training, (ii) evaluate the feasibility of our recruitment measures, and (iii) assess the feasibility of delivering our research measures. Methods: The feasibility study involved 41 adolescents, aged 12–14, who were randomly assigned to receive the ReSET intervention or their school’s usual mental health and wellbeing provision. Results: Qualitative data from intervention participants suggested the programme was experienced as a cohesive intervention, with participants able to draw on a combination of skills. Further, the cognitive-training tasks were received positively (with the exception of the interoception training task). The recruitment and research measures were successfully delivered in the school-based setting, with 97.5% retention of participants from baseline to post-intervention assessment. Qualitative data was overwhelmingly positive regarding the benefits to participants who had completed the intervention. Moreover, there was only limited data missingness. Conclusions: We conclude that a trial of the ReSET intervention in a school setting is feasible. We discuss the implications of the feasibility study with regard to optimising school-based interventions and adaptations made in preparation for a full-scale randomised controlled trial, now underway.
AB - Background: Adolescence is a developmental period during which an estimated 75% of mental health problems emerge (Solmi et al. in Mol Psychiat 27:281–295, 2022). This paper reports a feasibility study of a novel indicated, preventative, transdiagnostic, school-based intervention: Building Resilience Through Socioemotional Training (ReSET). The intervention addresses two domains thought to be causally related to mental health problems during adolescence: social relationships and emotion processing. Social relationships were targeted using principles from interpersonal psychotherapy, while emotion processing was targeted using cognitive-emotional training focused on three areas of emotion processing: Emotion perception, emotion regulation and interoception. The aims of this feasibility study were to (i) assess the acceptability of integrating group-based psychotherapy with individual cognitive-emotional training, (ii) evaluate the feasibility of our recruitment measures, and (iii) assess the feasibility of delivering our research measures. Methods: The feasibility study involved 41 adolescents, aged 12–14, who were randomly assigned to receive the ReSET intervention or their school’s usual mental health and wellbeing provision. Results: Qualitative data from intervention participants suggested the programme was experienced as a cohesive intervention, with participants able to draw on a combination of skills. Further, the cognitive-training tasks were received positively (with the exception of the interoception training task). The recruitment and research measures were successfully delivered in the school-based setting, with 97.5% retention of participants from baseline to post-intervention assessment. Qualitative data was overwhelmingly positive regarding the benefits to participants who had completed the intervention. Moreover, there was only limited data missingness. Conclusions: We conclude that a trial of the ReSET intervention in a school setting is feasible. We discuss the implications of the feasibility study with regard to optimising school-based interventions and adaptations made in preparation for a full-scale randomised controlled trial, now underway.
KW - Adolescence
KW - Emotion processing
KW - Feasibility
KW - Psychopathology
KW - Social relationships
KW - Transdiagnostic
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000779444&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s13034-025-00870-z
DO - 10.1186/s13034-025-00870-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000779444
SN - 1753-2000
VL - 19
JO - Child and adolescent psychiatry and mental health
JF - Child and adolescent psychiatry and mental health
IS - 1
M1 - 29
ER -