Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this study is to compare the efficacy of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for depression in a bibliotherapy format and assess hypothesized mechanisms of change in depression symptomatology, quality of life, and functioning. This study will test the following hypotheses: 1. CBT and ACT will both result in decreased depression, distress, and self-stigma associated with depression. Life satisfaction and values progress will increase in both conditions. 2. CBT will result in greater use of reappraisal than ACT. 3. ACT will results in greater use of defusion and decreased psychological inflexibility than CBT. 4. Changes in experiential avoidance and defusion will predict changes in depression in the ACT condition. 5. Changes in reappraisal will predict changes in depression in the CBT condition. 6. Participants who are given their choice of treatment will show better adherence and satisfaction in the intervention.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators aim to recruit 150 participants for this RCT (50 per treatment condition). This will provided adequate power (0.80) to detect differences between groups of medium effect size (d=0.50). Note that detailed eligibility criteria are listed in the "Eligibility" section. Participants will be recruited via SONA, flyers, online postings, classroom announcements, and through the USU CBS lab website. All study procedures will be completed online, on a computer/mobile phone. After completing informed consent online through Qualtrics, participants will complete an online baseline survey. Participants will then be randomized to one of three groups: a CBT book, an ACT book, or a choice between the two books. Participants will be asked not to access other self-help books during the study duration. A link will be provided to access the book online along with a 10-week suggested reading schedule. Participants will be asked to complete a midtreatment survey 5 weeks after the beginning of treatment, and a posttreatment survey 10 weeks after the beginning of treatment. A follow-up survey will be sent to participants 3 months after the posttreatment survey. In addition to psychological measures, these surveys will also ask about adherence and use of strategies taught in the book. Researcher contact will involve reminders to complete assessments and weekly reminders of the suggested reading schedule. Participants assigned to the CBT condition will receive a link to access The Cognitive Behavioral Workbook for Depression (Knaus, 2008), based on a psychosocial treatment that has shown effectiveness in reducing depression symptoms (Jiménez, 2012). The primary treatment components in this book are psychoeducation (introducing the cognitive behavioral model of depression), self-assessment worksheets (e.g. identifying depressive thought patterns, separating sensations from appraisals), cognitive restructuring, using metacognition/logic, and avoiding perfectionism. Participants assigned to the ACT condition will receive a link to access The Mindfulness and Acceptance Workbook for Depression (Strosahl & Robinson, 2008), based on a modern cognitive behavioral therapy that combines acceptance and mindfulness methods with values and behavior change methods (Hayes, Strosahl & Wilson, 2011). The primary treatment components in this book are psychoeducation (introducing the ACT model of depression), values and goals, mindfulness, acceptance, defusion, committed action, and "rewriting" inflexible life stories. An additional subset of study participants will be given their choice of the two self-help books described above after completing the baseline assessment. Participants who are randomized to receive their choice of book will be provided a brief description of the contents of each book before making a decision. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03796143
Study type Interventional
Source Utah State University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date January 7, 2019
Completion date August 15, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT06267534 - Mindfulness-based Mobile Applications Program N/A
Completed NCT04108689 - Internet-based Acceptance and Commitment Training for Elite Ice Hockey Players N/A
Recruiting NCT06012084 - The Development and Evaluation of iCF-PWR for Healthy Siblings of Individuals With Cystic Fibrosis N/A
Completed NCT04085861 - Mental Health in Dancers; an Intervention Study N/A
Recruiting NCT05227352 - Bio-Experiential Spaces for Mental Health in Healthworkers N/A
Completed NCT03663075 - Effect of Group Education and Individual Counselling on Mental Health and Quality of Life in 45-60 Year Old Women N/A
Completed NCT02480907 - Supporting Carers of Children and Adolescents With Eating Disorders in Austria (SUCCEAT) N/A
Completed NCT02157766 - Wisconsin Center for the Neuroscience and Psychophysiology of Meditation N/A
Completed NCT01155687 - Psychosocial Counseling in Afghanistan N/A
Unknown status NCT01177696 - Intervention in Groups of Family Caregivers in Primary Health Care N/A
Completed NCT01037946 - Family to Family: Psychoeducation to Improve Children's Outcomes in HIV+ Families N/A
Completed NCT00700349 - Evaluation of Impacts of Access to Credit and Loan Size for Microcredit Clients in South Africa N/A
Recruiting NCT03885401 - Enhanced Care Planning for Patients With Multiple Chronic Conditions N/A
Completed NCT03118388 - Engaging Homeless Youth in Vocational Training to Meet Their Mental Health Needs Phase 2
Completed NCT05061966 - The Digital Wellbeing Project N/A
Completed NCT04026308 - Written vs Electronic Safety Planning Study N/A
Completed NCT04546061 - Project Uplift: Substance Use and Mental Health Treatment for Young Sexual and Gender Minorities N/A
Recruiting NCT05738109 - Evaluating the Efficacy of a 91-day Self-talk Mental Health Self-care Journal N/A
Completed NCT03901274 - Partnering for Student Wellness N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05910580 - Improving Alcohol and Substance Use Care Access, Outcome, Equity During the Reproductive Years N/A