TY  - JOUR
A1  - Hayes, Daniel
A1  - Burton, Alexandra
A1  - Bu, Feifei
A1  - Humphrey, Neil
A1  - Qualter, Pamela
A1  - Han, Emeline
A1  - Sticpewich, Lou
A1  - Wright, Joely
A1  - Bone, Jessica K
A1  - Maguire, Sophia
A1  - Gonzalez Umpierrez, Lucas Caetano
A1  - Stapley, Emily
A1  - Tibber, Marc S
A1  - Fancourt, Daisy
JF  - PLoS ONE
SN  - 1932-6203
PB  - Public Library of Science (PLoS)
UR  - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0317823
ID  - discovery10206630
N2  - Background:
Social prescribing is a mechanism for connecting patients with non-medical forms of support within the community and has been shown to improve loneliness. Yet uptake from young people (YP) has been lower than for adults. That is thought to be the case because young people are less likely to engage with primary care for wellbeing support, where social prescribing is based. The INACT study will pilot a social prescribing pathway via schools to support young people who are lonely, testing its feasibility and acceptability of delivering, and evaluating its impact on loneliness through a randomised controlled trial.
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Methods:
This pilot study utilises a two-group (intervention vs. active control) parallel randomised design, with YP as the unit of randomisation. Approximately 78 pupils reporting loneliness will be recruited across 12 mainstream (6 primary and 6 secondary) schools in England. The co-produced social prescribing intervention includes 6-12 sessions over an 8-week period with a Link Worker who will work with individuals, on a one-to-one basis, to understand ?what matters to them? and connect them with local sources of support. Pupils in the control group will receive signposting to sources of support from school staff. Data will be collected at baseline, 3- and 6-month follow-up. Acceptability and feasibility will be assessed via participant recruitment and retention, and via qualitative interviews. Interviews will also explore barriers and facilitators to engagement and implementation and mechanisms of change. Primary and secondary outcomes will be completed to assess response and completeness, including measures of loneliness, mental health and wellbeing.
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Discussion:
The INACT study will provide preliminary evidence of the feasibility and acceptability of both the research design and social prescribing intervention. Results will inform a planned future randomised trial.
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Trial registration:
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06656663.
N1  - Copyright © 2025 Hayes et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
IS  - 3
Y1  - 2025/03/26/
AV  - public
VL  - 20
TI  - INcreasing Adolescent social and Community supporT (INACT): Pilot study protocol
ER  -