Quality of Life Clinical Trial
— SOCIALOfficial title:
Supporting Our Caregivers In ADRD Learning (SOCIAL): Reducing Stress for Caregivers of Persons With Dementia, a Pilot Randomized Control Trial
Building on limitations of prior research, the investigators developed the Mindful and Self-Compassionate Care Program (MASC) to help caregivers of persons with Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias (ADRD) manage stress associated with the general caregiver experience including stress stemming from managing challenging patient behaviors. MASC teaches: (1) mindfulness skills; (2) compassion and self-compassion skills; and (3) behavioral management skills. MASC also provides psychoeducation and group-based training and skill practice to facilitate skill uptake and integration within the caregiver experience and tasks. The main aim is to: Demonstrate feasibility, acceptability, credibility, fidelity, preliminary efficacy and evidence for proposed mechanism of MASC through a pilot randomized controlled trial. Relevant stakeholders (caregivers of persons with ADRD) will participate in the intervention.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 80 |
Est. completion date | April 1, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | March 15, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - 18 years or older - English fluency and literacy - Meeting criteria for being a caregiver (e.g., family or friend of a care recipient who provides unpaid care) - Must live with and care for an individual with ADRD - Must have been in a caregiver role for more than 6 months - Must provide an average 4 hours of supervision or direct assistance per day for the are recipient - Perceived Stress Scale-4 (4-item) version >=6 - Had managed 1 or more behavioral symptoms in past month Exclusion Criteria: - Recent change in psychotropic treatment for depression or anxiety - Use of mindfulness apps or any meditation (more than 60 min/week in past 6 months) - Involvement in another clinical trial for caregivers, a score >= 4 on the Portable Mental Status Questionnaire (PMSQ) - No stated concerns or distress related to care recipient's disruptive behaviors - Involvement in another clinical trial for caregivers |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Massachusetts General Hospital | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Massachusetts General Hospital | National Institute on Aging (NIA), University of California, San Francisco |
United States,
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* Note: There are 15 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Symptoms of Depression | Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D). The CES-D is a 20-item scale widely used with ADRD participants. Response options range from 0 to 3 for each item (0 = Rarely or None of the Time, 1 = Some or Little of the Time, 2 = Moderately or Much of the time, 3 = Most or Almost All the Time) In scoring the CES-D, possible range of scores is 0 to 60, with the higher scores indicating the presence of more symptomatology. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Mindfulness | The Applied Mindfulness Process Scale (AMPS) is a process measure used to quantify how participants in mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) use mindfulness practice when facing challenges in daily life. The AMPS yields 15 items representing three domains of applied mindfulness processes: (a) decentering, (b) positive emotional regulation, and (c) negative emotional regulation. AMPS can be scored by:(1) Adding each factor individually to obtain a score ranging from 0-20, and/or (2) adding all 15 items to obtain a score ranging from 0-60, with higher scores indicating higher use of mindfulness. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Perceived Stress Scale | The Perceived Stress Scale 10 (PSS-10) assesses perceived stress using a 5-point Likert scale.
The total score is determined by adding together the scores of each of the four items. Questions 2 and 3 are reverse coded. Questions 1 and 4: 0 = Never; 1 = Almost never; 2 = Sometimes; 3 = Fairly often; 4 = Very often Questions 2 and 3: 4 = Never; 3 = Almost never; 2 = Sometimes; 1 = Fairly often; 0 = Very often. Scores range from 0 to 40 with higher scores indicating more stress. |
Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Symptoms of Anxiety | The State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) state subscales (20 items) assesses anxiety symptoms in response to stressful situations. The range of possible scores varies from a minimum score of 20 to a maximum score of 80. STAI scores are commonly classified as "no or low anxiety" (20-37), "moderate anxiety" (38-44), and "high anxiety" (45-80). | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | The Self-Compassion Scale | The Self-Compassion Scale - Short Form (SCS-SF) is a 12-item self-report measure that is used by adults to measure their capacity for self-compassion - the ability to hold one's feelings of suffering with a sense of warmth, connection and concern. Self-Kindness Items: 2, 6 Self-Judgment Items (Reverse Scored): 11,
12 Common Humanity Items: 5, 10 Isolation Items: 4, 8 Mindfulness Items: 3, 7 Over-identification Items: 1, 9 = max score of 8 per category |
Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Compassion | The Compassion Scale (CS) has 16 items assessing common humanity, kindness toward others and ability to understand the suffering or challenges of others. Kindness items: 2, 6, 10, 14 Common Humanity items: 4, 8, 12, 16 Mindfulness items: 1, 5, 9, 13 Indifference items (reverse scored): 3, 7, 11, 15. Subscale scores are computed by calculating the mean of the four subscale item responses. Total compassion scores are computed by reverse scoring the indifference items then taking a grand mean of all items. When examining subscale scores, higher scores on indifference items indicate less compassion before reverse-coding, and more compassion after reverse coding. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Caregiver self-efficacy | The Revised Caregiver Self-efficacy assesses domains of self-efficacy including obtaining respite, responding to disruptive patient behaviors and controlling upsetting through. The Caregiver Self-Efficacy Scale is an 8-item scale with possible scores ranging from 1 to 10 with higher scores indicating higher self-efficacy | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Loneliness | The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) 3-item loneliness scale assesses relational connectedness, social connectedness and self-perceived isolation.
The scores for each individual question can be added together to give participants a possible range of scores from 3 to 9. Researchers in the past have grouped people who score 3 - 5 as "not lonely" and people with the score 6 - 9 as "lonely". |
Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Social Support | The Interpersonal Support Evaluation List short form (ISEL) is a 12-item measure of perceptions of social support. Response options range from 1-4 with 4 = "definitely true" if the participant is sure it is true about them, 3= "probably true" if the participant thinks it is true but is not absolutely certain. Similarly, the participant should circle 1 = "definitely false" if they are sure the statement is false and 2 = "probably false" if the participant thinks it is false but is not absolutely certain. This questionnaire has three different subscales designed to measure three dimensions of perceived social support. These dimensions are: 1.) Appraisal Support 2.) Belonging Support 3.) Tangible Support Each dimension is measured by 4 items on a 4-point scale ranging from "Definitely True" to "Definitely False". Scores range from 4-16. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Well-being | The World Health Organization-Five Well-Being Index (WHO-D) has 5 items assessing emotional well-being. The raw score is calculated by totaling the figures of the five answers. The raw score ranges from 0 to 25, 0 representing worst possible and 25 representing best possible quality of life. To obtain a percentage score ranging from 0 to 100, the raw score is multiplied by 4. A percentage score of 0 represents the worst possible, whereas a score of 100 represents the best possible quality of life | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Distress Due to Patient Challenges Behaviors | The Neuropsychiatric Inventory Caregiver Distress Scale has 12 items assessing distress associated with dementia patient's behaviors such as apathy, elation, disinhibition. Participant distress is rated for each positive neuropsychiatric symptom domain on a scale anchored by score from 0 to 5 points. The Score is: 0 = Not distressing at all, 1 = Minimal (slightly distressing, not a problem to cope with), 2 = Mild (not very distressing, generally easy to cope with), 3 = Moderate (fairly distressing, not always easy to cope with), 4 = Severe (very distressing, difficult to cope with), 5 = Extreme of Very Severe (extremely distressing, unable to cope with) | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Other | Dyadic Relationship Scale | The Dyadic Relationship Scale (DRS) (11 items) assesses negative and positive dyadic interactions between caregivers and their care recipient. Each item is rated on four-point scale (0-3) and responses are summed for a total score. Possible scores range from 0 to 33 with higher scores indicating higher levels of strain and positive interaction. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Primary | Feasibility of Recruitment | The proportion of eligible participants who are eligible and choose to enroll in the study and the percentage of racial and ethnically diverse participants enrolled. | Baseline | |
Primary | Feasibility of Randomization | The percentage randomized who complete the post-test. | Baseline, Post intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Feasibility of Assessment Measures | The proportion of participants who complete the study with less than 25% of missing questionnaires. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Primary | Feasibility of Quantitative Measures | The benchmark of no questionnaires missing fully in =25% of caregivers. | Baseline, Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline), 3-months post intervention | |
Primary | Adherence to treatment | The proportion of caregivers who attend at least 4 out of the 6 sessions out of all randomized caregivers. Adherence to treatment will be estimated for both HEP and MASC. | Post-intervention | |
Primary | Patient's Global Impression of Change (PGIC) | PGIC is a 7-point scale depicting a participant's rating of overall improvement. Participants rate their change as "very much improved", "much improved", "minimally improved", "no change", "minimally worse", "much worse" or "very much worse" | Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Perceptions of Questionnaire Battery | The 'Perceptions of Questionnaire Battery' qualitative measure assesses how appropriately the participants fill the questionnaires, address their perception of stress, emotional distress and all other questionnaires. | Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Adherence to Home Practice | The proportion of participants who complete weekly home practice. | Weekly (up to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Perceptions of Email and Text Reminders | Participants' perception of emails and text messages reminders. The single question -, "Do participants think that the number of emails/texts received was: too little, just enough, too much?" | Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Credibility and Expectancy | The Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ) assesses participants' perceptions that the treatment will work after participating in the intervention. | Baseline | |
Primary | Modified Perception of Global Improvement | The Modified Perception of Global Improvement (MPGI) is a global index designed to measure a participant's interpretation of changes in perceptions of stress following intervention. | (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Satisfaction with the Intervention | The investigators will use the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-3) to assess participants' satisfaction with the intervention. | Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) | |
Primary | Therapist Fidelity | Ability of therapist to deliver the content of each session (through therapist completed adherence checklists) and therapist fidelity (through independent review of recorded sessions by Co-Investigator). | Baseline through Post-intervention (6-8 weeks post baseline) |
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