Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05929040

The Use of Cognitive Mindfulness for Chemsex

Using the Behaviour Change Technique Taxonomy v1 to Conceptualize the Clinical Content of a Preliminary Randomised Controlled Study of an Online Mindfulness-based Cognitive Intervention for Chemsex

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
29 (actual)
Sponsor
London Metropolitan University · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Title of research: A preliminary RCT of an online mindfulness-based cognitive intervention for Chemsex Research aim: To determine how an online mindfulness-based cognitive intervention, might reduce Chemsex engagement, risky sexual behaviours, sexual self-efficacy and increase overall wellbeing among men who have sex with men. Research intention: If the mindfulness based cognitive intervention reduces Chemsex engagement and risky sexual behaviours and supports sexual and general wellbeing, then we would repeat this study on a larger scale within the National Health Service among men who have sex with other men and who engage in Chemsex. Both academic output and dissemination accordingly. A brief overview of intervention: Chemsex, sometimes coined as Chemfun, is a term used to describe the use of psychoactive substances with the intention of enhancing and/or facilitating the sexual experience/arousal and predominates among gay and bisexual men. Chemsex drugs tend to include, γ-hydroxybutyric acid and congeners, methamphetamine, mephedrone, erectile dysfunction agents, and alkyl nitrites often in combination. A growing body of research has suggested that mindfulness supports minimize drug using behaviors HIV stress and risky sexual behaviours. However, there appears no current mindfulness intervention that has been evidenced for Chemsex. Our intervention is hoped to become part of a multidisciplinary approach in supporting Chemsex which includes a cross-over effect between drugs, sexual well-being, and general wellbeing. Quantitatively, the research is structured so that participants will be randomized to either the experimental or control group (n=20 experimental; n=20 control waitlist). The MBCI for each group is 1 month (4 wks experimental and 4 wks waitlist control). This is followed by a 3-month follow-up to determine the sustainability of this intervention. Qualitatively, participants will be asked approx 8 open-ended feedback questions forming part of 4 groups of 10, at the 3-month follow-up.

Detailed description

The principal researcher developed an online cognitive mindfulness intervention. The main target in this study was to engage participants with mindfulness exercises whilst improving wellbeing and mindfulness whilst reducing Chemsex use. The main exercises included mindfulness, breathing exercises, relaxation techniques, being mindful of the senses and the body and understanding of the self. This online mindfulness based cognitive intervention contains cognitive, emotional, and behavioural factors and each of the 4 sessions included substance use and sexual behaviour, working with the inner critic and high-risk situations, sex without drugs and sexual identity and psychosexual wellbeing, substance use and self-compassion. Homework exercises were encouraged which consisted of education, training, modelling, and enablement. To expand, education included psychoeducational information on chemsex, sexual wellbeing, and mindfulness along with additional resources. Training provided the instructions on how to go about engaging in these online activities. Modelling provides examples in action such as MSM discussing their experiences of Chemsex including verbal persuasion and challenging negative self-talk, and how to go about doing the exercises, and enablement is aimed at increasing participants capability of engaging in these activities towards wellbeing. This would be further supported by charts, self-monitors, diaries, and journaling. Further, prompts, action plans, and cues were supportive intervention components. Feedback and support along with discussing the educational components, training, modelling and enablement had been addressed throughout the duration of this study. The development of the mindfulness based cognitive intervention has been based on a behavioral change techniques taxonomy. This have been used because the behavioural change techiques taxonomy has been rigorously tested to evidence the effectiveness in support of interventions associated with change behaviour. The 93 behavior change techniques are the active ingredients of behavior change where each intervention is likely to consist of more than one behaviour change technique and serve as having more than one function. In total, the intervention in this study included 15 domains in which 35 out of the 93 behaviour change techniques listed in the behavioural change technique taxonomy were identified. The selection of these domains used a process of triangulation to ensure consistency in mapping the behaviour change techniques to the intervention.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALmindful cognitive interventionMindfulness based cognitive intervention based on the behavioural change techniques taxonomy

Timeline

Start date
2022-03-05
Primary completion
2023-06-23
Completion
2023-06-23
First posted
2023-07-03
Last updated
2023-07-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05929040. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.