This study is testing a smartphone-delivered program to help women living in informal settlements in Kenya manage intimate partner violence (IPV) and stress related to extreme weather events. Women in these communities often face high levels of violence from partners, challenges caused by climate-related events, and limited access to support services. Participants will be randomly assigned to either a mobile intervention or a comparison condition. The mobile program provides short, tailored sessions that help women learn safety planning, coping skills, and strategies for adapting to climate-related stress. The program also offers tools to improve communication and strengthen social support. The main goal of the study is to see whether this smartphone-based approach can reduce the frequency and severity of IPV over 12 months. The study will also examine changes in stress levels, self-confidence in handling problems, social support, and safety behaviors. Results from this study may help create accessible, scalable support for women experiencing IPV and climate-related stress in similar settings.
This study is a randomized controlled trial designed to test the effectiveness of a smartphone-delivered intervention that integrates climate adaptation strategies with an evidence-based approach to reducing intimate partner violence (IPV) and related stress among women living in informal settlements in Kenya. Women living in informal settlements face high levels of poverty, climate-related stressors, and intimate partner violence. Climate-related shocks can increase household stress and economic strain, which may in turn increase the risk of IPV. Despite growing evidence linking climate stress and violence, there are few scalable, low-cost interventions that address both climate-related stress and IPV risk simultaneously. The intervention builds on prior formative and pilot work conducted in the R21 phase of this project. It combines climate adaptation and problem-solving strategies with core elements of the Women Initiating New Goals of Safety (WINGS) intervention. The program is delivered via smartphone and uses brief, event-triggered sessions to provide support when participants report elevated stress or conflict risk. Participants receive tailored content focused on safety planning, coping skills, communication strategies, and climate-related adaptation planning. In the R33 phase, 272 women who previously participated in the R21 phase and meet eligibility criteria will be enrolled and randomized to either the smartphone intervention or a comparison condition. Participants will be followed for 12 months. The primary outcome is the incidence and severity of intimate partner violence over the 12-month follow-up period. Secondary outcomes include stress, self-efficacy, social support, safety behaviors, and related mental health indicators. Assessments will occur at baseline and at multiple follow-up time points, including 3, 6, and 12 months. The results of this trial will provide evidence on whether a scalable, smartphone-delivered intervention that integrates climate adaptation and violence prevention strategies can reduce IPV and related stress among women living in high-risk urban settings in Kenya.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
272
Participants receive a single-session mobile WINGS intervention with self-administered activities on psychoeducation about IPV types/mechanisms, motivation building, safety planning/revision, goal setting, social support enhancement, service needs identification, referral linkage, and self-care planning. Content adapted to address climate change-IPV linkages. Over 9 months following extreme weather events (heatwaves, cold spells, heavy rainfall), participants receive 2 weeks of daily EMI morning prompts with personalized, revisable safety plans, SOS contact lists, and updated IPV service referrals. Daily questions assess IPV self-efficacy, safety plan implementation, social support, and service utilization. Kenya Meteorological Department provides localized 24-hour forecasts. Delivered via decoy wellness app with PIN protection and untraceable SOS button. Study smartphone, monthly data package, and on-call counselor provided.
Participants receive a single-session mobile WINGS intervention with self-administered activities on psychoeducation about IPV type, motivation building, safety planning/revision, goal setting, social support enhancement, service needs identification, referral linkage, and self-care planning. Content adapted to address climate change-IPV linkages. Delivered via decoy wellness app with personalized PIN protection and untraceable SOS button that sends pre-written texts to emergency contacts. Participants complete intervention once following enrollment. No event-triggered EMI prompts following extreme weather events. Continuous access to SOS emergency protocols, emergency contact setup, and regularly updated lists of local IPV-related services. Study smartphone, monthly data package, and on-call counselor provided
Incidence and Severity of Intimate Partner Violence (VAR CORR-5)
Measured using the WHO IPV diagnostic (VAW CORR-5) instrument, which includes subscales for controlling behaviors and sexual, physical, and emotional IPV.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months; daily during two-week EMA periods
Safety Behaviors (Safety Behavior Checklist)
Measured using an adapted 7-item Safety Behavior Checklist. Assesses use of safety behaviors including hiding money, hiding an extra set of house keys, establishing a safety code/protocol with family or friends, asking neighbors to call police if violence begins, removing weapons from the house, preparing a safety packet with important documents (national IDs, birth certificates), preparing a list of important phone numbers for emergencies, hiding a bag with extra clothing, and setting aside money or other valuables for safety purposes.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Receipt of IPV-Related Services (SRI)
Measured using the Services Receipt Inventory (SRI). Assesses whether participants have received services, counseling, or support for partner abuse.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months; daily during two-week EMA periods
Social Support (ESSI)
Measured with the 6-item Enriched Social Support Inventory (ESSI), which assesses the availability of emotional and instrumental support and advice for relationship conflict or problems with intimate partners and other issues
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Perceived Stress (PSS)
Measured using the 10-item Perceived Stress Scale. Assesses degree to which situations are felt as stressful over the past month
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Depression Symptoms (PHQ-9)
Measured using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Assesses frequency of depressive symptoms over the past two weeks including little interest or pleasure in doing things; feeling down, depressed, or hopeless; trouble sleeping; feeling tired; poor appetite or overeating; feeling bad about yourself; trouble concentrating; moving or speaking slowly or being restless; and thoughts of being better off dead or hurting yourself
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Anxiety Symptoms (GAD-7)
Measured using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7). Assesses frequency of anxiety symptoms over the past two weeks including feeling nervous, unable to stop worrying, worrying too much, trouble relaxing, restlessness, irritability, and feeling afraid. Also assesses how difficult these problems have made it to do work, take care of things at home, or get along with others.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post-single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Emotional Stress (Momentary)
Measured using a single-item scale. Assesses current feelings of stress, tension, restlessness, nervousness, or anxiety where 0=Not at all to 5=Very much.
Time frame: Daily during two-week EMA periods
Climate Related Comfort
Measured using EMA questions. Assesses perceived comfort with temperature (Very comfortable to Very uncomfortable); feeling unsafe/unwell due to temperature; perception of extreme temperatures or rainfall; and approximate temperature where participant is located.
Time frame: Daily during two-week EMA periods
Social and Environmental Context
Measured using EMA questions. Assesses current location (indoors/outdoors); specific location type (home, work, visiting, vehicle, shop, kitchen, toilet, bar/restaurant); who participant is with (alone, children, partner, friends, strangers, colleagues); and current activities.
Time frame: Daily during two-week EMA periods
Current Safety
Measured using EMA questions. Assesses perceived safety at the moment (Very unsafe to Very safe) and reasons for feeling unsafe or unsure.
Time frame: Daily during two-week EMA periods
Coping Strategies
Measured using coping and support questions. Assesses behaviors used to cope with stress over the past month including getting a good night's sleep; meditation/mindfulness practices; talking with friends; talking with family; engaging in more family activities (farming, washing, games, sports); talking to people who are pregnant or parenting; increased television time; increased time on social media; decreased time on social media; increased time following news coverage; decreased time following news coverage; increased food intake; decreased food intake; increased self-care (baths, facial make up); increased time reading books or doing puzzles; using alcohol; using drugs; talking to health providers more frequently; talking with a mental health care provider (therapist, psychologist, counselor); helping others; and other strategies.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
Disability and Functioning (WHODAS)
Measured using the WHO Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS). Assesses difficulty over the past 30 days with standing for long periods, household responsibilities, learning new tasks, community participation, concentration, walking long distances, washing whole body, getting dressed, dealing with strangers, maintaining friendships, and day-to-day work due to health problems.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months
IPV Self-Efficacy (DVSE)
Measured using the Domestic Violence Self-efficacy Scale (DVSE)-an 8-item scale that measures perceived competency in managing abuse and conflict with partners.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately post single session of WINGS, and at 3, 6, and 12 months; daily during two-week EMI periods
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