Intellectual Disability Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluating a Brief Mindfulness-based Intervention for Parents of Adults With Intellectual Disabilities: a Case Series.
Being a parent to an adult person with learning disabilities can be very stressful, and can
lead to experiencing mental health problems. Not much is known about what sort of support
services should be offering to these parents; and not many options are available as a result.
This study will try to find out if a short intervention, known as a mindfulness-based
intervention (MBI), can be of help to these families. A mindfulness-based intervention is one
that aims to increase someone's mindfulness, which is the ability to be aware of the present,
in a non-judgemental fashion.
Simply put, what the investigators would like to find out from this study is: "Can a short
course of MBI help improve the well-being of parents of adults with learning disabilities?"
To answer this question, the investigators will seek to invite parents to attend a
mindfulness course of the duration of 4 sessions. Parents will be invited to participate by
NHS staff at their local Community Learning Disabilities Team, who will hand out information
sheets and consent forms. Parents will be informed that they may choose to withdraw from the
study at any time without this having any negative effect. The investigators will also ask
parents to provide feedback on their experience of the course using online questionnaires.
Parents will be asked to complete the questionnaires at 6 points: 1 month before the start of
the course, at the start of the course, at the end of the course, and at 3, 6 and 12 months
after the course has ended. This way, the investigators will be able to track any changes in
how parents rate their well-being; and if these changes persist in the long-term.
At the end of the study, participants will be offered information on the results.
A multitude of studies has established that parenting a child with intellectual disabilities
(IDs) can negatively influence the psychological and physical wellbeing of primary
caregivers. The same correlation between IDs and parental psychological distress exists in
the parents of adults with IDs, with the transition from childhood to adulthood being
particularly detrimental to the psychological wellbeing of the family. Carers of children
with IDs often report increased levels of parental stress, a feature that is amplified in
some categories of IDs, such as in autism spectrum disorder. Importantly, the effects of this
especially demanding relationship are not limited to impacting the carers' wellbeing alone;
they can also affect the carers' ability to respond to problematic child behaviour, and
result in financial hardship.
In terms of psychological distress on the part of people with intellectual disabilities
(PWIDs), this is most often observed in the form of challenging behaviour, which can be used
by PWIDs to communicate their distress. Of interest to the present study, the complex and
enduring pattern of difficulties observed within these families cannot be accounted for
purely by the psychological distress of the carers, nor does it stem from challenging
behaviour alone. Instead, it has been proposed that the relationship between parental stress
and the child's challenging behaviour is bi-directional, and self-reinforcing, in that
parental stress can increase challenging behaviour, just as challenging behaviour can induce
stress, and other forms of psychological distress. This pattern has been observed in families
with children, as well as in families with adults with IDs.
Given the link between challenging behaviour, parental stress, and their interdependent
nature, there has recently been a focus on employing therapeutic modalities that are
explicitly aimed at reducing stress, with third-wave cognitive behavioural therapies (CBT) at
the forefront of such scrutiny. Among third-wave CBTs, mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs)
have been employed with especially promising results, making them veritable candidates as
effective interventions for what is a sizeable segment of the population.
MBI adaptations
It should be noted that the increased range of applicability derived from said universality
can limit the scope and clarity of the MBIs' research base. Specifically, as observed in a
recent review on the efficacy of MBIs in parents of children with disabilities, a plethora of
different interventions and adaptations of MBIs are continuously being developed, from the
classic programmes devised by Jon Kabat-Zinn and his team, to hybrid interventions that
combine MBIs with other therapies, such as DBT or ACT. Such abundance of variation can limit
the precision with which the various MBIs are comparable with one another, and frustrates the
search for a definite analysis of precisely which mindfulness factors contribute to the
self-reported decreases in psychological distress. In parallel, efforts are being made to
distil the essential criteria a mindfulness intervention should be based on.
MBIs can also be adapted in relation to their structure, not just by intervention modality
they incorporate. Shortened versions of MBIs have been devised and tested with positive
results, with effect sizes for psychological outcomes comparable to those found in programmes
of classic length. Shortened MBIs can cover the same content as their lengthier counterparts,
within fewer sessions; or they may simply reduce the content they cover, and provide that
within fewer sessions. In both instances, the literature suggests that there is no
significant correlation between psychological outcomes and course length, indicating that
shortened versions of MBIs may achieve the same psychological outcomes by the end of the
programme, in clinical, as well as non-clinical populations.
Presently, no robust research exists on what intervention works best for parents of PWIDs,
particularly within the realm of adults with IDs. To the author's knowledge, only one study
has to date explored the effectiveness of a short MBI aimed specifically at parents of adults
with a disability. It should be noted, however, that the study primarily evaluated parents of
adults with a diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This limits the generalisability
of the study to the ASD population, which represents but a section of the population with
IDs. In addition, the authors of the study acknowledge that parents of adult children with
IDs often find it difficult to commit to a course of MBI due to the time constrains dictated
by their children's needs, and recommend the trialling of even shorter MBIs, with no studies
to date having evaluated an MBI as brief as the one proposed herein. Finally, despite there
being extensive research on the shorter-term effects of MBIs, no study to date has focussed
with sufficient emphasis on the longer-term effects of MBI course. Advancing our
understanding of whether MBIs retain their effect over time can lead to substantial
improvements in terms of clinical applications.
Based on the premises that:
1. shortened versions of MBIs have successfully generated psychological change in
comparable populations; and
2. theoretical models relating to children with disabilities suggest that parental stress
negatively influences the caregiver-offspring dyad;
it is hypothesized that a 4-week MBI course will achieve positive psychological outcomes in
this population.
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