Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00936351

Mindfulness Meditation as a Rehabilitation Strategy for Persons With Schizophrenia

Mindfulness as a Rehabilitation Strategy in Schizophrenia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
34 (actual)
Sponsor
US Department of Veterans Affairs · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to develop a treatment manual for mindfulness meditation to be taught in a group format to individuals with schizophrenia who are engaged in vocational rehabilitation. This study will also determine whether mindfulness meditation is beneficial in terms of improving work function by reducing distressing emotional states and thinking patterns.

Detailed description

Objectives: Schizophrenia involves numerous difficulties including being aware of ones' own thoughts and tolerating painful affects. As a result, persons with schizophrenia find coping with life stressors quite challenging and thus have difficulty engaging successfully in psychosocial activities such as work in spite of state of the art programs. To address this problem this study will evaluate an intervention that has come to the fore that targets these impairments called mindfulness. Mindfulness involves teaching individuals skills that improve their ability to attend to their experience in the present moment while suspending judgment and to purposefully shift their attention. Thus mindfulness enhances the ability to monitor and manage emotions and thought processes so that individuals can reflect on, choose, and implement more effective responses. Use of mindfulness skills with other populations has led to more sustained behavior change than occurs with standard treatments. Recently research has begun to indicate mindfulness interventions can be delivered with success for individuals with schizophrenia. This pilot study will be a first step in adapting mindfulness as a cognitive intervention for individuals with schizophrenia who are engaging in vocational rehabilitation in order to maintain their functional gains beyond the end of the program. Key questions to be answered through this study include: (1) Can a mindfulness manual be developed that helps persons with schizophrenia enrolled in vocational rehabilitation exhibit better work function and reduced levels of distressing emotional states and thinking patterns?; (2) Can materials necessary for the faithful transmission of the mindfulness group intervention/manual (MGI) in the current study be created?; (3) Can mindfulness skills be adapted and successfully taught to and accepted by persons with schizophrenia in a group setting?: (4) Will individuals with schizophrenia who practice mindfulness benefit?; (5) What are the effect sizes with a reasonable control to study the effectiveness of the manualized MGI? Research Design: This study will take place over 3 years and is divided into two phases: manual development and pilot study. In the manual development phase existing mindfulness protocols will be adapted to target work function of persons with schizophrenia. The randomized controlled pilot study phase will explore the effects of the intervention on key outcome measures. Methodology: A total of 52 individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder will be recruited from the Roudebush VA Medical Center (18 in the non-randomized, non-controlled manual development phase 1 and 34 in the randomized controlled pilot phase 2). In phase one, manual development, 18 participants will be recruited and following informed consent, screened for eligibility using the SCID and anxiety measures. Once enrolled, three successive groups of 6 participants will attend an 8-week mindfulness program consisting of two 60-minute group training and practice sessions each week. The mindfulness program will incorporate didactic and experiential elements aimed at learning mindfulness skills and establishing a daily mindfulness practice. Based on the experience gained working with each of these three initial cohorts, a mindfulness manual will be created. In phase two, the pilot of the mindfulness manual, 34 additional participants will be recruited and randomized to the mindfulness intervention or support group control. All groups will complete assessments at baseline, monthly, at program end and 6 months after program end as well as formative and summative program evaluations. Clinical Significance: Results of this study will yield materials necessary to begin the process of assembling a body of research validating scientifically the therapeutic value of mindfulness for veterans with schizophrenia who are enrolled in vocational rehabilitation. Findings may ultimately provide the VA system with information regarding a potentially cost effective approach to the care of these veterans who are disabled by a chronic mental illness that would be exportable to other VA vocational rehabilitation programs that have patients with schizophrenia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMindfulness MeditationMindfulness involves teaching individuals skills that improve their ability to attend to their experience in the present moment while suspending judgment and to purposefully shift their attention. Thus mindfulness enhances the ability to monitor and manage emotions and thought processes so that individuals can reflect on, choose, and implement more effective responses. This intervention has been adapted from mindfulness based stress reduction treatment.
BEHAVIORALSupport Group (control)A support group during which participants can discuss with each other any issues, problems, or successes at work will be conducted as the control portion.

Timeline

Start date
2007-12-01
Primary completion
2010-09-01
Completion
2010-12-01
First posted
2009-07-10
Last updated
2015-04-10
Results posted
2015-04-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00936351. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.