Title: Evaluation of the Time to Change Programme
1Evaluation of the Time to Change Programme
Claire Henderson Graham Thornicroft, Clare
Flach, Sara Evans-Lacko, Ann Law, Elly
Lewis-Holmes, Kirsty Little, Jillian London, Paul
McCrone, Danielle Rhydderch, Diana Rose
Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London
Marshall Clemens and Philippe Vandenbroeck,
ShiftN TTC Central Management Team, LEAP, Mental
Health Media, Mind, Rethink
2Programme Foundations
- 1 Years of evidence that discrimination is at
epidemic levels in the UK
3- 2 Evidence that public attitudes had declined
Dept of Health, Public Attitudes to Mental
Illness Surveys. 2000 Representative Adults in GB
( agreeing with key statements)
4Evidence that population-wide attitudinal change
is possible
- International
- Like Minds Like Mine (New Zealand)
- See Me (Scotland)
5Like Minds Years 1 to 1043 to 55 (1997 to
2002, after two advertising campaigns)55 to 62
(2003 to 2007, after third campaign)
6- Consortium of three voluntary sector partners
Mind, Rethink, Institute of Psychiatry - 16million Big (well-being) 2m Comic Relief.
Government funds 1/3m for research tools and two
secondees to TTC and DH-funded Shift in
anti-stigma programme in England. - Four year programme - 2007-2011 with a ten-year
vision - 35 projects - 6 national, 28 local, 1 evaluation
7Outcome Targets
- 5 positive shift in public attitudes towards
mental health problems - 5 reduction in discrimination by 2012
- 100,000 people with mental health problems with
increased ability to address discrimination - ÂĽ m people engaged in physical activity
8New Hybrid
- Social marketing to change the societal context
- Legal Rights (test cases, resources for
employees) - Empowerment - training and support to tackle
discrimination, 32 local and 8 national user-led
campaigns, improvements to empowerment and social
inclusion indicators - Individual wellbeing programmes and whole
population wellbeing messages - Training future professionals
9Delivery Model
- Community Action National Noise
- National Noise
- campaign website
- mass participation physical activity
- legal test cases
- Community
- 28 local physical activity projects (improved
well-being, self-esteem, empowerment, social
inclusion) - 32 local user-led anti-discrimination campaigns
10Anti-stigma social marketing campaign - a
national social marketing campaign using
advertising, PR, and other marketing techniques
to change public attitudes. Reaching 30million
adults. Open Up 40 user-led projects and a
training programmes to empower and support a new
army of discrimination champions tacking
discrimination in local communities. Get Moving!
- annual mass participation event focusing on
physical activity for mental well-being.
Involving people with and without mental health
problems.
11Time to Challenge - taking high-profile test
cases on disability legislation to establish
legal rights, producing on-line legal resources
for people experiencing discrimination in the
workplace, and a resource to help employers
understand their legal duties. Website highly
inter-active tool supporting the whole programme,
activating public support, as well as sharing
models of good practice. END (Education Not
Discrimination) - anti-stigma training for key
professional audiences (trainee doctors,
teachers, head teachers social inclusion
officers).
12Stigma Causal Mechanisms- Basic Model
13Population level evaluation
14Target group level evaluation
15Service user level evaluation
16The Lancet
17 DISC Discrimination and Stigma Scale
- Experience of discrimination
- Domains key areas of everyday life and social
participation, including work, marriage,
parenting, housing, leisure, and religious
activities. - Example questions
- Have you been treated unfairly by the people in
your neighbourhood? - Have you been treated unfairly in dating or
intimate relationships? - Have you been treated unfairly in your housing?
(including becoming homeless) - N/A Not at all A little Moderately A lot
18Negative Experienced Discrimination 1
19Anticipated Discrimination
- Similar ideas self-stigma, self-discrimination
- Avoidance of important actions eg
- applying for a job
- seeking a close relationship
- because of previous failure or
- in anticipation of failure
20DISC (2)
- Anticipated discrimination sub-scale
- 4 items address how far participants limit their
own involvement in important aspects of everyday
life, including work and intimate relationships. - ExampleHave you stopped yourself from having a
close personal relationship? - N/A Not at all A little Moderately A lot
21Anticipated Discrimination
22Stigma Causal Mechanisms- Basic Model
23Understanding our Audience
- Thats sad, but its not me - stigma is often
subconscious - Discrimination? Whats that got to do with mental
health? - I wouldnt want anyone to know
- The fear factor
- Lack of understanding and information
- Theres not much connection between my life and
mental health problems - Walking on eggshells
24Stigmatisation overview
Generating societal change by targeting
subconscious stigmatisers is more likely to
impact conscious and active stigmatisers/discrimin
ators vs. head-on challenge
Subconscious Stigmatisers
Conscious Stigmatisers
Active Discriminators
- Socially unacceptable for mainstream society
- Finding channels and messages to address these
individuals highly challenging
25Year One Target Audience
Core audience C1C2D, 27-46 (24m people)
No experience of Mental Health Problems
More experience
Very Close
Limited experience of Mental Health Problems, not
completely oblivious
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28 Mental heAlth Knowledge Schedule (MAKS) (1)
29 Mental heAlth Knowledge Schedule (MAKS) (2)
- For questions 7-12, say whether you think each
condition is a type of mental illness - (Agree strongly----disagree strongly)
- 7. Depression
- 8. Stress
- 9. Schizophrenia
- 10. Bipolar disorder (manic-depression)
- 11. Drug addiction
- 12. Grief
30 Community Attitudes to Mental Illness
(CAMI)
- Items targeted for goal of 5 reduction by 2012
- Virtually anyone can become mentally ill
- People with mental health problems are far less
of a danger than most people suppose - People with mental health problems should not be
given any responsibility
31 Reported and Intended Behaviour Scale
(RIBS) (1)
- Instructions The following questions ask about
your experiences and views in relation to people
who have mental health problems (for example,
meaning people seen by healthcare staff) - Are you currently living with, or have you ever
lived with, someone with a mental health problem?
(Yes/No/Dont Know) - 2. Are you currently working, or have you ever
worked, with someone with a mental health
problem? - 3. Do you currently, or have you ever, had a
neighbour with a mental health problem? - 4. Do you currently have, or have you ever had, a
close friend with a mental health problem?
32 Reported and Intended Behaviour Scale
(RIBS) (2)
- 5. In the future, I would be willing to live with
someone with a mental health problem - (Agree strongly----disagree strongly)
- 6. In the future, I would be willing to work with
someone with a mental health problem - 7. In the future, I would be willing to live
nearby to someone with a mental health problem - 8. In the future, I would be willing to continue
a relationship with a friend who developed a
mental health problem
33 Empowerment Making Decisions (Rogers et al
1997)
- Examples
- People have more power if they join together as a
group. (4 points, Strongly agree-strongly
disagree) - Getting angry about something never helps.
- I am usually confident about the decisions I make.
34 Warwick-Edinburgh Wellbeing Scale
- Examples
- Ive been feeling optimistic about the future (5
points, None of the time---All of the time) - Ive been feeling useful
- Ive been feeling interested in other people
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36Data from the Cambridge Pilot Time to Change
Campaign
37 Campaign Overview
- Site specific launch in Cambridge
- 29th Sept 24th Oct
- Advertising venues included
- bus stops
- cafes, pubs
- local radio and paper
- street art
- 1 day football tournament
38 Research Timeline - In
person Interviews
Pre-Campaign N92
Post-Campaign N120
During Campaign N198
39 Sample Characteristics
- Quotas set pre/post
- 50 advertised press readers
- 50 advertised radio station listeners
- sex, age (25-44), SES (B, C1, C2)
- Social contact know, or have known, someone with
a mental health problem - Pre (40.2) Post (51.7)
40 Campaign Awareness
Campaign period
41 MAKS RIBS Psychometric
Data
- Validity
- Results of our work with expert panels (including
service users) indicate content validity in MAKS
and RIBS - Reliability
- MAKS
- Test-Retest Overall (0.71), Items (0.59-0.91)
- RIBS
- Test-Retest Overall (0.74), Items (0.53-1.0)
- Internal Consistency (0.66-0.82)
42 Did the 1-month Time to Change Campaign have any
effect on stigma related Knowledge, Attitudes, or
Intended Behaviour?
43 Knowledge About Mental Health
(MAKS)
Significant at the p 0.05 level after
adjusting for social contact
44 Attitudes About Mental Health (CAMI)
NOT significant at the p 0.05 level after
adjusting for social contact
45 Changes in Intended Behaviour (RIBS) who
agree strongly/slightly
Q. In the future, I could
NOT significant at the p 0.05 level after
adjusting for social contact
46Conclusions and Future Research Directions
- Low to moderate levels of campaign awareness
- Potentially significant improvements in important
knowledge and behaviour related constructs - Important to explore the persistence of these
trends during the national campaign and to
further explore the relationship between
knowledge, attitudes and behaviour - Address potential social desirability and
modality of MAKS and RIBS