Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT04761510
Mindfulness-SOS: Stress Reduction for Refugees
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 60 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of Haifa · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 65 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The COVID-19 pandemic crisis is associated with a wide range of stressors for the general population. For forcibly displaced persons (FDPs), the turmoil of this crisis is magnified significantly, and elevated pre-existing post-migration stressors and trauma-related mental health problems are acutely amplified. In a recent randomized control trial, Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) led to large acute stress-buffering effects among Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel. The investigators thus developed Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees - a brief internet-based mobile-supported adaptation of the MBTR-R mental health intervention program - specifically designed to mitigate acute stress and related mental health symptoms among FDPs. The investigators will conduct a nonrandomized single-group intervention trial of the efficacy, safety, utilization, and related feasibility of Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees among a traumatized chronically stressed sample of East African asylum seekers in an urban post-displacement setting in the Middle East (Israel). The study will be carried out during an acutely stressful period of time for this population due to a COVID-19 pandemic national lockdown.
Detailed description
Brief Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is associated with a range of stressors and consequent mental health problems. For tens of millions of FDPs, stressors and sequelae of the pandemic are particularly magnified and severe, as their preexisting stress-related mental health problems are acutely exacerbated. In a recent randomized control trial prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the investigators found significant therapeutic effects of MBTR-R - a 9-week, mindfulness- and compassion-based, trauma-sensitive, and socio-culturally adapted group intervention program designed for FDPs - for stress- and trauma-related mental health outcomes among Eritrean asylum seekers in Israel. In light of the COVID-19 pandemic, and to facilitate access, reach, and flexibility of mental health care among FDPs, the investigators developed Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees - a brief internet-based mobile-supported adaptation of the MBTR-R mental health intervention program - specifically designed to mitigate acute stress and related mental health symptoms among FDPs. Study Aims: Broadly, the study aims are: I) to test the efficacy of the Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees intervention program on stress- and trauma-related mental health outcomes (e.g. posttraumatic stress, depression), II) to test intervention safety - including rates of clinically significant deterioration in primary outcomes in response to the intervention, III) to assess participant utilization of the Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees intervention program, IV) to test whether Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees will lead to changes in targeted processes or mechanisms of change including mindful awareness and self-compassion, and V) to test whether expected pre-to-post intervention change in the targeted processes will predict expected pre-to-post intervention change in stress- and trauma-related mental health outcomes. Study Overview: Accordingly, the investigators will conduct a nonrandomized single-group intervention trial among a community sample of traumatized and chronically stressed East African asylum seekers (N=60, 50% female), residing in Israel in an urban post-displacement setting, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Over the course of three successive months, participants will be recruited from the community via public flyers, social networks, local non-governmental- (NGOs), and municipal- organizations working with FDPs. Participants will be assigned to Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees - a brief internet-based mobile-supported intervention program, entailing 8 brief sessions as well as 9 mindfulness meditation practice exercises - delivered via audio recordings using participants' personal smartphones. Over the course of the Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees intervention program, participants will receive administrative guidance (e.g. technical support in case of mobile phone and internet platform-related difficulties and relevant information of the internet-based mobile-supported intervention program and assessment); as well as adherence-focused guidance (e.g. adherence monitoring including weekly brief check-in telephone calls and smartphone text-based nudges to remind and prompt weekly adherence and assessment), in the participants' mother tongue, Tigrinya. Stress- and trauma-related mental health outcomes and targeted change processes will be assessed via self-report questionnaires pre-intervention, brief weekly assessments, and post-intervention. In addition to participants' self-report, participant-level utilization of the Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees intervention program will be digitally monitored. Participants will be encouraged to complete 2 sessions per week and practice each day for 4 weeks but can choose to extend this up to 8 weeks. Post-intervention assessments will be carried out when participants will complete the 8 sessions of the internet-based mobile-supported intervention program (recommended 4 weeks, a maximum of 8 weeks post-baseline, or when participants will indicate that they are no longer interested in participating in the intervention program). The intervention program and assessments will be completed on participants' smartphones.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees | Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees is a brief internet-based mobile-supported intervention program which is a mobile-health adaptation of MBTR-R - a mindfulness- and compassion-based, trauma-sensitive, and socio-culturally adapted group intervention program designed for FDPs. Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees entails 8 brief sessions and 9 mindfulness meditation practice exercises - delivered via audio recordings using participants' smartphones. The intervention program is specifically designed to mitigate acute stress and related mental health symptoms among FDPs. During participation in the Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees intervention program, participants will be encouraged to complete 2 sessions per week and practice each day for 4 weeks but can choose to extend this up to 8 weeks. Delivery of Mindfulness-SOS for Refugees entails administrative guidance as well as adherence-focused guidance. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2020-09-14
- Primary completion
- 2021-01-14
- Completion
- 2021-01-14
- First posted
- 2021-02-21
- Last updated
- 2021-02-21
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Israel
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04761510. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.