Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adaptive Intervention for At-risk Family Caregivers
This study will develop and evaluate the effectiveness of an adaptive treatment model for reducing the stress of, and burden on, family members caring for a person with dementia.
Caring for a person with dementia can be a highly stressful experience associated with a
variety of negative outcomes. Family caregivers are more likely than noncaregivers to
experience symptoms of depression and anxiety, feelings of anger, and health problems.
Although there are multiple treatment models to address the adverse mental and physical
health outcomes associated with caregiving, most do not account for the specific risk and
protective factor differences among caregivers of people with dementia. Such models provide
the same treatment to all participants and have demonstrated only limited success in this
high-risk caregiver population. An adaptive treatment model based on the Stress Process
Model of caregiving, which emphasizes that there are multiple factors that affect stress,
social support, and mental health, may better meet the needs of family caregivers. This
study will first develop an adaptive treatment model, based on the Stress Process Model, for
family caregivers of a person suffering from dementia. The study will then evaluate the
effectiveness of each component of the adaptive treatment model in improving negative
outcomes in the family caregivers.
This study will be conducted in two phases. Phase 1 will be used to develop an adaptive
treatment model and risk report from which tailored treatment will be prescribed to
participants in Phase 2. Participants in Phase 1 will attend four 90-minute interviews over
4 months. The first three interviews will be held in the first 3 to 4 weeks of the study and
the last will be about 3 months later. In the first interview, participants will be asked
about their experiences caring for their relatives, physical and emotional well-being, and
ideas on helpful types of assistance. In the second and third interviews, participants will
discuss their caregiving situations in more detail and will receive information about
programs and services that may help them carry out caregiving activities. During the final
interview, participants will again be asked about their experiences caring for their
relatives.
Phase 2 of the study will test the adaptive treatment model developed in Phase 1.
Participants in Phase 2 will attend an initial and final interview and up to 10 planning
sessions. Each interview or planning session will last 60 to 75 minutes and will be tailored
to the risks of each individual caregiver. During planning sessions, participants will
discuss their caregiving situations in more detail, learn strategies to deal with stress,
and receive information about programs and services that may help in carrying out caregiving
activities. The strategies that participants will learn may include the following: new
skills for communicating with the person receiving care, reflecting upon ways to reduce the
impact of the changes that caregiving has had on their lives, learning more effective ways
of communicating their own needs to other family members and friends, and identifying which
types of services might be useful in caring for the person with dementia. The Phase 2
interviews will be the same as the initial and final interviews of Phase 1.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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