TY - JOUR
T1 - Reporting cultural adaptation in psychological trials - The recapt criteria
AU - Heim, Eva
AU - Mewes, Ricarda
AU - Ramia, Jinane Abi
AU - Glaesmer, Heide
AU - Hall, Brian
AU - Shehadeh, Melissa Harper
AU - Ünlü, Burçin
AU - Kananian, Schahryar
AU - Kohrt, Brandon A.
AU - Lechner-Meichsner, Franziska
AU - Lotzin, Annett
AU - Moro, Marie Rose
AU - Radjack, Rahmeth
AU - Salamanca-Sanabria, Alicia
AU - Singla, Daisy R.
AU - Starck, Annabelle
AU - Sturm, Gesine
AU - Tol, Wietse
AU - Weise, Cornelia
AU - Knaevelsrud, Christine
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding: The project that led to the development of the reporting criteria and the paper was funded by the German
Publisher Copyright:
© Clinical Psychology in Europe 2021.
PY - 2021/11
Y1 - 2021/11
N2 - Background: There is a lack of empirical evidence on the level of cultural adaptation required for psychological interventions developed in Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) societies to be effective for the treatment of common mental disorders among culturally and ethnically diverse groups. This lack of evidence is partly due to insufficientdocumentation of cultural adaptation in psychological trials. Standardised documentation is needed in order to enhance empirical and meta-analytic evidence. Process: A "Task force for cultural adaptation of mental health interventions for refugees" was established to harmonise and document the cultural adaptation process across several randomised controlled trials testing psychological interventions for mental health among refugee populations in Germany. Based on the collected experiences, a sub-group of the task force developed the reporting criteria presented in this paper. Thereafter, an online survey with international experts in cultural adaptation of psychological interventions was conducted, including two rounds of feedback. Results: The consolidation process resulted in eleven reporting criteria to guide and document the process of cultural adaptation of psychological interventions in clinical trials. A template for documenting this process is provided. The eleven criteria are structured along A) Set-up; B) Formative research methods; C) Intervention adaptation; D) Measuring outcomes and implementation. Conclusions: Reporting on cultural adaptation more consistently in future psychological trials will hopefully improve the quality of evidence and contribute to examining the effect of cultural adaptation on treatment efficacy,feasibility, and acceptability.
AB - Background: There is a lack of empirical evidence on the level of cultural adaptation required for psychological interventions developed in Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) societies to be effective for the treatment of common mental disorders among culturally and ethnically diverse groups. This lack of evidence is partly due to insufficientdocumentation of cultural adaptation in psychological trials. Standardised documentation is needed in order to enhance empirical and meta-analytic evidence. Process: A "Task force for cultural adaptation of mental health interventions for refugees" was established to harmonise and document the cultural adaptation process across several randomised controlled trials testing psychological interventions for mental health among refugee populations in Germany. Based on the collected experiences, a sub-group of the task force developed the reporting criteria presented in this paper. Thereafter, an online survey with international experts in cultural adaptation of psychological interventions was conducted, including two rounds of feedback. Results: The consolidation process resulted in eleven reporting criteria to guide and document the process of cultural adaptation of psychological interventions in clinical trials. A template for documenting this process is provided. The eleven criteria are structured along A) Set-up; B) Formative research methods; C) Intervention adaptation; D) Measuring outcomes and implementation. Conclusions: Reporting on cultural adaptation more consistently in future psychological trials will hopefully improve the quality of evidence and contribute to examining the effect of cultural adaptation on treatment efficacy,feasibility, and acceptability.
KW - Common mental disorders
KW - Cultural adaptation
KW - Psychological interventions
KW - Randomised controlled trials
KW - Reporting criteria
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U2 - 10.32872/cpe.6351
DO - 10.32872/cpe.6351
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85120751189
SN - 2625-3410
VL - 3
JO - Clinical Psychology in Europe
JF - Clinical Psychology in Europe
M1 - e6351
ER -