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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Active, not recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05940168
Other study ID # I-Navigator ACT
Secondary ID
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date February 1, 2021
Est. completion date November 30, 2023

Study information

Verified date July 2023
Source Karolinska Institutet
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of the project is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of the internet-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy treatment (I-Navigator ACT) for parents who experience stress, distress, depression or anxiety that may be associated with being a parent of a child with disabilities. The project consists of three studies: Study 1: An open feasibility trial in which parents participate in an individual, clinician-supported internet-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy treatment. Study 2: A randomized controlled trial in which participants are randomly assigned either: 1. Navigator ACT group treatment, where parents participate in an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy group together with other parents, led by two group leaders, or 2. I-Navigator ACT internet-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy treatment, where the parent participates on their own, coached by a clinician via a message function. Study 3: A qualitative study in which a smaller sample of parents from the open feasibility trial participate in semi-structured interviews. The interviews take place after the parents have completed I-Navigator ACT. All three studies are conducted in a clinical health care context.


Description:

Internet Navigator ACT (I-Navigator ACT) is an individual, internet-delivered Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) treatment, adapted from the manualized ACT group Navigator ACT for parents of children with disabilities. The purpose of I-Navigator ACT is to provide a treatment option that isn't bound by geography, especially beneficial for patients who have limited access to in-person support and care. I-Navigator ACT was developed with a co-creation approach, which included pilot testing with a small group of parents to gather their detailed feedback. Their feedback was considered for refining the treatment. I-Navigator ACT consists of ten online modules with different themes based on ACT processes. Participants receive weekly written support from an experienced clinician (coach), via a message function. The program is available through the Swedish national platform for internet-delivered treatments (1177.se). There are three studies planned in this project. The first study (Study 1) will be conducted as a open feasibility trial, in which all participating parents after enrolment and inclusion (via telephone or video call) will be allocated to the I-Navigator ACT treatment. The main purpose of this study is to evaluate feasibility and acceptability of the treatment. Feasibility is measured through treatment completion, treatment credibility and expectation, as well as treatment satisfaction. Preliminary outcomes regarding effectiveness will also be evaluated in this study. Participants are being assessed at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three months post-treatment. The second study (Study 2) will be conducted as a randomized controlled trial with two treatment arms. The randomized controlled trial is conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of the I-Navigator ACT treatment compared to the Navigator ACT group treatment. After enrolment and screening via telephone or video call, eligible participants are invited to an information meeting. Once the participants have given their informed consent and completed pre-treatment assessments, they are randomly assigned either the five-session Navigator ACT group, or the I-Navigator ACT treatment. The treatments run parallel during the same semester, and participants are being assessed at the same time points (pre-treatment, post-treatment, and three months post treatment). Effectiveness will be evaluated through the primary outcome measure of acceptance and action-based skills, and secondary outcome measures parental stress, depression and anxiety symptoms, experiential avoidance, mindfulness-based skills, and parent-rated child behavioral problems. The third and final study (Study 3) will be a qualitative study based on semi-structured interviews, and will be utilizing a thematic content analysis. The interviews will mainly focus on the experience of participating in an internet-delivered ACT treatment for parents. Data collection commenced in early spring of 2021 (beginning with the open feasibility study) and is projected to be completed by November 2023. N = 32 participants have been allocated to treatment in the open feasibility study, whereas n = 134 participants have been allocated to treatment in the RCT. Nine parents have participated in qualitative interviews.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Active, not recruiting
Enrollment 134
Est. completion date November 30, 2023
Est. primary completion date November 30, 2023
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria (in all studies): - Being a parent of at least one child (4-17 years of age) with any or several of the following disabilities: autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, intellectual disability, physical disability (eg cerebral palsy), traumatic brain injury and/or a profund and multiple intellectual disability (PMID) - Experiencing stress, distress, depression and/or anxiety that to some extent may be associated with being a parent of a child with a disability - Having access to a personal computer or tablet with a stable internet connection - In Study 2 (RCT) also: being able to participate in the group treatment OR the internet-delivered treatment Exclusion Criteria: - Currently experiencing a serious mental disorder (eg ongoing psychosis, acute suicidal behaviours) or currently being treated at an in-patient mental health facility - Not experiencing stress, distress, depression and/or anxiety that to some extent may be associated with being a parent of a child with a disability - Not being able to read, write or speak the Swedish language - Not being able to participate in all planned sessions - Not having access to a personal computer or tablet with a stable internet connection - In Study 2 (RCT) also: not being able to participate in the group treatment OR the internet-delivered treatment

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
I-Navigator ACT
The intervention is an internet-delivered ten module Acceptance and Commitment Therapy treatment program for stressed and distressed parents of children with disabilities. The contents of the program is mostly text based, but also includes videos, mindfulness exercises and written exercises, as well as homework between modules.
Navigator ACT group
The intervention is a five session Acceptance and Commitment Therapy group treatment for stressed and distressed parents of children with disabilities. All five sessions have different themes and are held by two group leaders. Sessions are around two and a half hours long. Homework is given between sessions.

Locations

Country Name City State
Sweden Habilitering & Hälsa Stockholm Region Stockholm

Sponsors (4)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Karolinska Institutet Forte, Region Stockholm, Stiftelsen Frimurarna Barnhuset

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Sweden, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other Study 1: Treatment Credibility Scale (TCS) As a measure of feasibility, TCS is used to measure the expectation of improvement and treatment credibility. The TCS is a visual analogue scale rated from "Low credibility"/ "Not at all" (0) to "High credibility"/"Very much" (10) and the score calculated is a mean of all items. The TCS was administered after providing thorough information and presentation of the treatment content at baseline and after completion of the treatment. The item wording after adjustment to the current study were: (1) How logical does the treatment seem to you? (2) How confident are you that this treatment will reduce your distress? (3) Would you recommend the treatment to a friend experiencing the same type of distress? (4) How successful do you feel this type of treatment is in improving your psychological health? 5) At this very moment, to what degree has the treatment improved your psychological health? Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), and post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2).
Other Study 1: Current Life Situation Form (CLS) Participants complete the Current Life Situation Form in order to collect relevant demographic data, as well as measures on their quality of life. A complete version of the form is administered at the time of inclusion (T1), whereas a shorter version of the form (sans demographic data) is administrered at follow up (T2), (T3). Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Other Study 1: Module Evaluation Form An 8-item form, scored 1-5 where participants rate the current module. Participants rate each of every ten modules after each module is completed during the 10-12 weeks of ongoing treatment.
Other Study 2: Treatment Credibility Scale (TCS) As a measure of feasibility, TCS is used to measure the expectation of improvement and treatment credibility. The TCS is a visual analogue scale rated from "Low credibility"/ "Not at all" (0) to "High credibility"/"Very much" (10) and the score calculated is a mean of all items. The TCS was administered after providing thorough information and presentation of the treatment content at baseline and after completion of the treatment. The item wording after adjustment to the current study were: (1) How logical does the treatment seem to you? (2) How confident are you that this treatment will reduce your distress? (3) Would you recommend the treatment to a friend experiencing the same type of distress? (4) How successful do you feel this type of treatment is in improving your psychological health? 5) At this very moment, to what degree has the treatment improved your psychological health? Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), and post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2).
Other Study 2: Current Life Situation Form (CLS) Participants complete the Current Life Situation Form in order to collect relevant demographic data, as well as measures on their quality of life. A complete version of the form is administered at the time of inclusion (T1), whereas a shorter version of the form (sans demographic data) is administrered at follow up (T2), (T3). Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Other Study 2: Module Evaluation Form An 8-item form, scored 1-5 where participants rate the current module. Participants rate each of every ten modules after each module is completed during the 10-12 weeks of ongoing treatment.
Other Study 2 (only): Session Evaluation Form An 8-item form, scored 1-5 where participants rate the current group session. Participants rate each of every five group sessions after each session is completed during the 10-12 weeks of ongoing treatment.
Primary Study 1: Treatment completion rate In this feasibility study (study 1), treatment completion is defined as completing 7 out of 10 intervention sessions/modules. The benchmark for good feasibility is 75% of participants completing the treatment. Participants are assessed during the 10-12 weeks long treatment.
Primary Study 2: Changes in parental psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance Parental Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (PAAQ), a scale that targets psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance in the parenting context, i.e., measures to which extent parents' accept inner experiences related to parenting and the readiness to take appropriate and needed action in parenting (commitment to values-based actions). This was originally a 19-item scale. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Primary Study 3: Experiences of participating in an internet-delivered ACT treatment for parents The semi-structured interviews with parents after they have participated in the I-Navigator ACT treatment are based on the following seven interview questions:
How was your experience participating in I-Navigator ACT?
What aspects of the treatment did you appreciate?
What aspects of the treatment did you appreciate less?
Have you noticed any changes in your life, or everyday life after going through the treatment? Could you describe them?
What aspects of the treatment do you think will be useful to you?
What would you like to change about the treatment?
If you were given the possibility to participate in the treatment but in a different format, eg in a group context, or one-on-one with your care provider in a physical room, what do you think would have been different, and what would be quite similar to your experience? How do you think you would find that?
The interviews are conducted after (circa 3 months) parents have participated in the I-Navigator ACT treatment.
Secondary Study 1: Changes in general stress and parental stress Participants levels of stress and distress are assessed through the Parental Stress Scale (PSS), which is a 18-item psychometric scale (scored 1-5, where 1 indicates that the participant "Completely disagrees" with the statement and 5 indicates that the participant "Completely agrees" with the statement). Low scores indicate low levels of parental stress, whereas high scores indicate high levels of parental stress.
Another measure of stress is the Perceived Stress Scale 4 Items (PSS-4), which is a 4-item psychometric scale (scored 0-4, where 0 indicates "Never" and 4 indicates "Very often"). Low scores indicate low levels of stress, whereas high scores indicate high levels of stress.
The PSS measurement scale targets the specific kind of stress experienced by many parents, especially the stress experienced by parents of children with psychological/behavioral problems and children with disabilities. The PSS-4 measurement scale is designed to measure common stress symptoms.
Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 1: Changes in depression and anxiety symptoms The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) consists of 14 items (scored 0-4, where 0 - "Often", and 4 - "Never"), subsequently summarized for an overall score. Low scores indicate none or very mild depressive and/or anxiety symptoms, whereas high scores indicate clinical levels of severe depression and or/anxiety. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 1: Changes in mindfulness-based skills The Mindfulness Awareness Attention Scale (MAAS), a 15-item scale (scored 1-6, where 1 indicates "Almost always" and 7 indicates "Never") assessing dispositional mindfulness in regards to cognitive, emotional, physical, interpersonal and general domains. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 1: Changes in psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance The AAQ assessment is intended to measure psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance in a general context. It intends to measure to which extent one accepts inner experiences, and the readiness to take appropriate and needed action in one's life (commitment to values-based actions). AAQ is a 7-item psychometric scale (scored 1-7, where 1 indicates "Never true" and 7 indicates "Always true"). Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 1: Change in child's difficulties and the impact of these difficulties on the child's family The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (P4-17 SDQ), a caregiver administered, 25-item extended version of SDQ used for behavior screening of children and adolescents in ages 4-17 years. The SDQ P4-17 covers common areas of emotional and behavioral difficulties and strengths. It also includes a caregiver reported impact and burden assessment. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 2: Changes in general stress and parental stress Participants levels of stress and distress are assessed through the Parental Stress Scale (PSS), which is a 18-item psychometric scale (scored 1-5, where 1 indicates that the participant "Completely disagrees" with the statement and 5 indicates that the participant "Completely agrees" with the statement). Low scores indicate low levels of parental stress, whereas high scores indicate high levels of parental stress.
Another measure of stress is the Perceived Stress Scale 4 Items (PSS-4), which is a 4-item psychometric scale (scored 0-4, where 0 indicates "Never" and 4 indicates "Very often"). Low scores indicate low levels of stress, whereas high scores indicate high levels of stress.
The PSS measurement scale targets the specific kind of stress experienced by many parents, especially the stress experienced by parents of children with psychological/behavioral problems and children with disabilities. The PSS-4 measurement scale is designed to measure common stress symptoms.
Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 2: Changes in depression and anxiety symptoms The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) consists of 14 items (scored 0-4, where 0 - "Often", and 4 - "Never"), subsequently summarized for an overall score. Low scores indicate none or very mild depressive and/or anxiety symptoms, whereas high scores indicate clinical levels of severe depression and or/anxiety. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 2: Changes in mindfulness-based skills The Mindfulness Awareness Attention Scale (MAAS), a 15-item scale (scored 1-6, where 1 indicates "Almost always" and 7 indicates "Never") assessing dispositional mindfulness in regards to cognitive, emotional, physical, interpersonal and general domains. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 2: Changes in psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance The AAQ assessment is intended to measure psychological flexibility and experiential acceptance in a general context. It intends to measure to which extent one accepts inner experiences, and the readiness to take appropriate and needed action in one's life (commitment to values-based actions). AAQ is a 7-item psychometric scale (scored 1-7, where 1 indicates "Never true" and 7 indicates "Always true"). Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
Secondary Study 2: Change in child's difficulties and the impact of these difficulties on the child's family The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (P4-17 SDQ), a caregiver administered, 25-item extended version of SDQ used for behavior screening of children and adolescents in ages 4-17 years. The SDQ P4-17 covers common areas of emotional and behavioral difficulties and strengths. It also includes a caregiver reported impact and burden assessment. Participants are assessed at the time of inclusion, circa two weeks prior to the beginning of the intervention (T1), post-treatment, at the time of completing the intervention (T2), and at around three months after completing the intervention (T3)
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