Well-Being Clinical Trial
Official title:
Feasibility Pilot Randomised Control Trial for Brief Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Intervention for Adults Experiencing Homelessness to Enhance Well-Being and Mitigate the Deleterious Effects of Shame and Self-Stigma
The current project's overall aim is to develop and evaluate the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of an ACT intervention to promote psychological well-being and mitigate the deleterious effects of shame and self-stigma in people experiencing homelessness. This project will advance current knowledge using systematic and empirical methodology to develop and evaluate the benefits of a group-based ACT intervention, which to date has not been explored with this population.
On average homeless persons have higher rates of childhood and adult adversity, challenging
behaviour, substance and alcohol misuse, poor educational, occupational achievement,
co-morbid physical and mental illness. In mental health, services delivered on the basis of
address can struggle to mount a satisfactory response to the needs of homeless persons. Many
homeless persons rely on emergency department visits or inpatient hospitalizations for health
care. When admitted to hospital, they have longer stays with higher costs. With the rates of
homelessness increasing in both national and international contexts coupled with the several
barriers to accessing mainstream health services, the development of brief, cost-effective
interventions, that address comorbidity of various mental illnesses and substance abuse is
necessary.
In addition, individuals who have experienced homelessness can have their growth and
development curtailed by applying a punitive, shame based, and defeatist perspectives to
their own goals and values in life. Direct acts or discrimination, as well as diminished
opportunities offered to people experiencing homelessness, can be understood as a
manifestation of public stigma. Labelling someone as "homeless" or an "addict" tends to
activate common stereotypes such as thinking that the person is likely to be unreliable,
deceitful, or weak, among other stereotypes. This often leads to some sort of social sanction
or devaluation, reducing the probability of the person being hired, or being trusted as a
parent, friend, or lover.
People who identify with a stigmatised group often internalise the stereotypes associated
with that group. In addition, the effects of enacted stigma, the emotional and cognitive
barriers erected by the individual experiencing homelessness in response to perceived or
experienced stigma, can also serve to obstruct access to opportunities. The person may
self-identify as a loser, being damaged goods, or always hurting others. Attachment to these
self-conceptions entails giving up on important and valued life directions. These are
manifestations of self-stigma. Studies of individuals with serious mental illness and
co-occurring disorders have shown that self-stigma is associated with delays in treatment
seeking or avoidance of treatment, diminished self-esteem/self-efficacy, increased mental
health symptoms, and lower quality of life. Therefore, it is imperative that interventions
actively address and aim to mitigate the deleterious effects of shame and self-stigma.
Assertive Community Treatment and case-management interventions have been proven moderately
effective in improving mental and physical health outcomes for homeless populations, however,
the resources and expertise required to run such interventions are; unavailable to most
sectors and communities, time consuming and normally used on an individual case basis,
leaving large portions of this population untreated. Research into brief psychological
interventions with the homeless population has revealed promising effects, however, these
interventions often target specific sub-populations, chose to focus on one aspect of recovery
such as substance abuse and do not address comorbidity of illness.
The Acceptance and Commitment Therapy(ACT) model is compatible with conceptualisations of
recovery from severe mental illness (defined as "living a satisfying, hopeful and
contributing life even with limitations caused by the illness"; and "having a sense of
purpose and direction"). From an ACT perspective 'addictive-', 'depressive-', 'anxiety'- and
"stress-' behaviours might share the same function; and those with high levels of
comorbidity, such as the homeless population might therefore be treated using an ACT.
The focus on specific cognitive behavioural processes of mindfulness, acceptance, distancing,
and values-based action makes ACT interventions typically brief and have been proven to be
effective after a single session and mediation studies suggest that the positive clinical
effects of ACT are achieved by changing these targeted psychological processes.
A two-arm feasibility pilot randomised control trial will be conducted to investigate
differences in the proposed outcome variables between participants assigned to a group-based
ACT intervention and those assigned to peer support group. A process level investigation will
also be used to investigate the feasibility of conducting a full scale RCT with the
population.
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