Fear of Spiders Clinical Trial
— GARET2019Official title:
Randomized Controlled Trial on the Efficacy of a Gamified Augmented Reality Exposure-based Application in Subjects With Fear of Spiders
Verified date | December 2019 |
Source | University of Basel |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Investigation of the efficacy of a gamified augmented reality exposure app in individual with fear of spiders.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | December 4, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | December 4, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 40 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Fear of spiders - BAT score before exposure between 1-8 - Physically healthy - Fluent in German Exclusion Criteria: - BDI-II sumscore >=20 and/or item 9 >=1 - Concurrent psychotherapy or pharmacotherapy - Previous exposure-based therapy for spider phobia - Parallel participation in another study - Chronic medication intake (except oral contraceptives) - Medication intake before visits (less than 24h) - Alcohol intake before visits (less than 12 h) - Cannabis or other psychoactive substances (including benzodiazepines) intake before visits (less than 5 days) - For women: Current pregnancy |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Switzerland | University of Basel | Basel | BS |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Prof. Dominique de Quervain, MD | Swiss National Science Foundation |
Switzerland,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Self-reported change in disgust of spiders | For the self-reported change of disgust of spiders participants were asked to self-rate their subjective change in disgust of spiders on a single visual analogue scale in a range of 0 to 100 (0 = a lot worse, 50 = no change and 100 = a lot better). | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Other | AR exposure app acceptability and usability scale | The AR exposure app acceptability and usability scale consists of 11 items that assess the overall acceptability and usability (e.g. design, functionality) of the AR app for the experimental group. The items were solely composed for our study purposes. The first 9 items will be assessed through a 11-point scale, item 10 and 11 have an open answer format. Higher scores indicate higher acceptability and usability. | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Other | Credibility/Expactancy scale | The experimental groups therapy expectations regarding the successful treatment of their fear will be measured by an adapted credibility/expectancy for improvement scales with 5 statements. Participants rate their expectancy on a 11-point Likert-type scale (0 = not at all, 10 = absolutely, range 0 - 10) (Borkovec & Nau, 1972) | On study day one | |
Primary | Subjective fear (SUDS) in the in vivo BAT | During the BAT participants will be placed in front of a closed room with a spider in it and will be asked to open the door and approach a living house spider measuring about 5 cm, which will be placed in a sealed transparent plastic container on a table at the far end of the room. The participant will be requested to approach the spider and if possible, to touch the container, to remove the lid, insert a hand, and try to pick up and hold the spider for at least 20 s. Pre-defined scores ranging from 0 = refuses to enter the test room to 12 = holds the spider for at least 20 s will be given when the BAT was completed after 3 minutes or terminated by the participant. SUDS for fear and disgust will be taken during the BAT on the same score as on day one, ranging from 0 = no fear to 10 = maximum fear. | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Performance Behavioural Approach Test (BAT) in vivo | See primary outcome for a detailed description. | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Subjective disgust (SUDS) in the in vivo BAT | See primary outcome for a detailed description. | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Fear of spiders Questionnaire (FSQ) | The FSQ measures avoidance behavior as well as fear of harm and consists of 18 spider relevant situations. Participants evaluate their relationship to spiders on a 7-point Likert-type scale (0 = not at all true to 6 = absolutely true, range 0 - 108) (Szymanski and O'Donohue, 1995) | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Spider Beliefs Questionnaire (SBQ) | The SBQ assesses specifically spider-related catastrophic cognitions that will be challenged within the exposure sessions and consists of 48 possible thoughts and beliefs in spider situations. Participants evaluate whether they are convinced these beliefs are true while being in a spider situation with a percentage (0 = not at all convinced to 100 = firmly convinced) (Arntz et al. 1993) | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Clinical rating for specific phobia (DSM-V) | Fear of spiders will be re-assessed by the section for specific phobia (animal type: spider) of the structured diagnostic interview for mental disorders for DSM-V (DIPS, Schneider & Margraf, 2017) | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) | |
Secondary | Self-reported change in fear of spiders | For the self-reported change of fear of spiders participants were asked to self-rate their subjective change in fear of spiders on a single visual analogue scale in a range of 0 to 100 (0 = a lot worse, 50 = no change and 100 = a lot better). | 6 weeks after day one (4 weeks after completion of home training) |
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