R21MH134421
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Asha 2: An Ethnographic Study Embedded in a Depression Treatment Trial - A leading cause of global disability, depression is widespread among women in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Poverty is a major cause of depression, while depression worsens poverty, compromising economic productivity.
Funded by NIMH's Global Brain Initiative, the Asha Project is a groundbreaking research study that seeks to address the poverty-depression syndemic among rural Bangladeshi women using an integrated intervention model with both psychological and economic treatment. The project is a two-arm cluster randomized clinical trial carried out in villages in the Rangpur District of Northern Bangladesh—a flood-prone region with high rates of rural poverty.
Treatment groups of 12-15 women, led by village health workers, will be cluster-randomized into the integrated intervention arm (CASH/ASSET TRANSFER plus Problem Management (PM)+--a group-based, manualized psychotherapy) or to PM+ alone.
This application proposes to embed an ethnographic study inside the Asha RCT. Led by an interdisciplinary team of psychologists, anthropologists, and maternal health specialists in the US and Bangladesh, the study will investigate the complex relationships between Asha intervention processes and outcomes, and social contexts at the individual, household, neighborhood, and village levels.
Although ethnographic inquiry—the holistic study of local sociocultural contexts—is well suited to the generation of new knowledge, ethnographic studies are rarely integrated into mental health treatment trials. The research team will use a Rapid Ethnography (RE) approach to conduct qualitative interviews, focus groups, and structured observations, including salient local attributes such as presence of schools, clinics, and roads, alongside observations about how everyday life and governance is organized.
A comparative analysis will examine differences across study arms (integrated vs psychotherapy alone), participant engagement (retention vs attrition), and clinical outcomes (treatment response vs none). This will allow for the generation of hypotheses about key moderating and mediating variables affecting outcomes.
A capacity building program will train three young graduates in anthropology from a local university in Rangpur, providing both didactic training in Dhaka as well as hands-on supervision in data collection in the field. Fellows will receive training in data collection, clinical trial design, research ethics, and data analysis. Fellows will receive mentoring and support in obtaining research positions.
Funded by NIMH's Global Brain Initiative, the Asha Project is a groundbreaking research study that seeks to address the poverty-depression syndemic among rural Bangladeshi women using an integrated intervention model with both psychological and economic treatment. The project is a two-arm cluster randomized clinical trial carried out in villages in the Rangpur District of Northern Bangladesh—a flood-prone region with high rates of rural poverty.
Treatment groups of 12-15 women, led by village health workers, will be cluster-randomized into the integrated intervention arm (CASH/ASSET TRANSFER plus Problem Management (PM)+--a group-based, manualized psychotherapy) or to PM+ alone.
This application proposes to embed an ethnographic study inside the Asha RCT. Led by an interdisciplinary team of psychologists, anthropologists, and maternal health specialists in the US and Bangladesh, the study will investigate the complex relationships between Asha intervention processes and outcomes, and social contexts at the individual, household, neighborhood, and village levels.
Although ethnographic inquiry—the holistic study of local sociocultural contexts—is well suited to the generation of new knowledge, ethnographic studies are rarely integrated into mental health treatment trials. The research team will use a Rapid Ethnography (RE) approach to conduct qualitative interviews, focus groups, and structured observations, including salient local attributes such as presence of schools, clinics, and roads, alongside observations about how everyday life and governance is organized.
A comparative analysis will examine differences across study arms (integrated vs psychotherapy alone), participant engagement (retention vs attrition), and clinical outcomes (treatment response vs none). This will allow for the generation of hypotheses about key moderating and mediating variables affecting outcomes.
A capacity building program will train three young graduates in anthropology from a local university in Rangpur, providing both didactic training in Dhaka as well as hands-on supervision in data collection in the field. Fellows will receive training in data collection, clinical trial design, research ethics, and data analysis. Fellows will receive mentoring and support in obtaining research positions.
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Worcester,
Massachusetts
01655
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
University Of Massachusetts Medical School was awarded
Depression Treatment Trial in Bangladesh: Asha 2
Project Grant R21MH134421
worth $348,104
from the National Institute of Mental Health in September 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Worcester Massachusetts United States.
The grant
has a duration of 2 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.242 Mental Health Research Grants.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Global Brain and Nervous System Disorders Research Across the Lifespan (R21 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 11/9/23
Period of Performance
9/1/23
Start Date
8/31/25
End Date
Funding Split
$348.1K
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$348.1K
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R21MH134421
Transaction History
Modifications to R21MH134421
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R21MH134421
SAI Number
R21MH134421-3236905743
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75N700 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH
Funding Office
75N700 NIH NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH
Awardee UEI
MQE2JHHJW9Q8
Awardee CAGE
6R004
Performance District
MA-02
Senators
Edward Markey
Elizabeth Warren
Elizabeth Warren
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0892) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $343,104 | 99% |
Modified: 11/9/23