Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT04250012
Web-based ACT to Support Parents With Children With Chronic and Developmental Conditions
Effectiveness of a Web-based Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Wellbeing of Parents With Children With Chronic and Developmental Conditions: A Randomized Controlled Trial
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 111 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of Jyvaskyla · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 60 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Parents of children with a chronic disease or functional disabilities have an increased risk of stress-related distress and reduced quality of life. Internet-delivered interventions are one way to reach out to exhausted parents who may often have challenges in finding time to access face-to-face services. We developed a guided web-based Acceptance and Commitment Therapy intervention for Finnish parents of children with chronic conditions or functional disabilities. Participants (N=100) will be recruited on parent associations' Facebook groups and randomly assigned to guided web-based ACT condition and a control condition receiving psychoeducation. The guided web-based ACT condition will receive a 10-week web intervention including three remote meetings with a psychologist through the telemedicine application Doxy.me. Symptoms of burnout (SMBQ), depression (PHQ), health-related quality of life (RAND-36), mindfulness (FFMQ), general measure of psychological flexibility (CompACT) as well as the wellbeing of their child (KINDL) will be measured before (pre) and after the intervention (post), at 7-month (follow-up 1) and 10-month (follow-up 2) after the pre-measurement. In this randomized controlled trial we will investigate the outcomes and the mechanisms of change of the web-based ACTintervention. In addition, we will examine the acceptability of the web-based intervention.
Detailed description
Numerous studies have shown that parents of children with long-term and intellectual disabilities suffer more often from symptoms such as stress, anxiety and depression symptoms, feelings of uncertainty and fear, and loss of quality of life. In Finland, there are approximately 17.000 families where the illness or disability of a child under the age of 16 causes an extra daily burden for parents. Especially mothers of long-term or disabled children are vulnerable and have an increased risk of psychological symptoms. Parents of children with a chronic disease or functional disability also have an increased risk of stress-related distress and reduced quality of life. Prolonged psychological symptoms associated with caring for a child with a long-term illness can expose to chronic exhaustion and burnout, which can have serious health effects. The birth of a disabled child and the illness of a child with long-term illness also increases the risk of divorce in the family. Considering the hardship and challenges of this population group, special attention should be paid to their rehabilitation and access to services. In Finland, for example, the Finnish Social Insurance Institution offers adaptation training and family-oriented rehabilitation courses for family caregivers. However, this form of support has limited availability and, on the other hand, is of relatively short duration. Several studies indicate, however, that the parents' mental health also affects the health and development of the child, and especially the long-term stress experienced by the parent can be harmful to children. The challenge is to motivate parents to take care of themselves and thus to have a better capacity to care for their children in need of special support. The majority of parents have a full-time employment, which also poses challenges for the forms of support. Therefore, the support of this parent group should focus on treatments that are easily available for them. Web-based treatments offer one solution for delivering evidence-based psychological treatments for this distressed parents, who may often have challenges in finding time to access face-to-face services. Web-based interventions have been developed and tested for a wide range of health problems, including parental wellbeing. Advantages of web-based interventions are that they are not bound to time and place. They are available when most needed and enable integration of the intervention in everyday life. Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) represents the third-wave of Cognitive Behavioral Therapies and incorporates mindfulness, experiential acceptance, and valued action (e.g., engagement in meaningful, values-driven activities) to promote psychological flexibility. Several studies and meta-analyses have shown that acceptance and commitment therapy has a positive effect on a variety of psychological symptoms. Promising results from web-based ACT interventions have been obtained for example for the treatment of stress, anxiety, and depression. ACT and other mindfulness-based treatments have been shown to improve psychological adjustment and to decrease stress in parents of children with developmental disabilities including autism and acquired brain injury. The aim of the current study is to investigate the effectiveness of a web-based ACT intervention on wellbeing of parents with exhaustion and burnout symptoms, and whose children have chronic conditions and/or developmental disabilities. Effects will be investigated at before (pre) and after the intervention (post), at 7-month (follow-up 1) and 10-month (follow-up 2) after the pre-measurement. The research questions are the following: 1. Does the guided acceptance and commitment-based online intervention decrease the burnout and depression symptoms of parents of children with long-term illnesses and improve their quality of life, psychological flexibility, mindfulness skills, and cognitive strategies? 2. Which psychological processes (i.e., psychological flexibility, mindfulness skills, cognitive strategies) act as mediators of change? 3. Do the changes in the well-being of the parents improve the quality of life of the child? 4. How do parents experience online intervention and what kind of parent group especially will benefit from online support?
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Internet-based ACT intervention | The Internet-based ACT intervention included a 10-week web-based program consisting of five modules with different themes that the participants were instructed to process during the course of two weeks. The program was based on the processes of ACT and included themes such as life values, mindfulness, defusion, self-as-context acceptance and self-compassion. The content of each module consisted of text, video, exercises with audio files, and homework assignments. In addition, the participants filled in a diary with exercises in paper format. The intervention included also three remote meetings (à 45 minutes) via a videoconferencing tool doxy.me conducted by a psychologist. The remote meetings took place at the beginning, after 4 weeks, and at the end of the intervention. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Psychoeducation | The psychoeducation group received a self-help booklet and a link to a web-based wellness training program. The program included exercises with MP3 audio files. No personal support during the 10-week intervention was provided. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2019-01-28
- Primary completion
- 2020-12-15
- Completion
- 2020-12-15
- First posted
- 2020-01-31
- Last updated
- 2021-02-24
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Finland
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04250012. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.