Psychological Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Brief Hope Intervention to Increase the Hope Level and to Improve the Physical and Mental Health of Patients Receiving Palliative Care: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Aims. This paper describes the study protocol of a manualized brief positive intervention
(BHI). In addition, it reports the on the modification of a hope intervention based on the
theoretical proposition - hope theory, and its feasibility when applying to palliative
cancer and non-cancer patients.
Background. Hope was found to account for therapeutic changes in clients with depressive
symptoms or chronic pain. Nevertheless, little is known about the integration of such active
ingredients to brief and low intensity psycho-therapeutic interventions to patients
receiving palliative care were not adequately tested.
Design. The study included two stages: (1) manual development, and (2) a single blinded
randomized controlled trial.
Methods. Participants will be randomly assigned in equal number into either the brief hope
intervention or the controlled arm on completion of the baseline assessment. Participants of
the intervention group will be receiving the four-week intervention, while those allocated
to the control arm will be receiving the routine care and social chats. The intervention is
a manualized program that consists of four sessions at weekly intervals (two face to face
sessions and two telephone follow up in between). The core content is modified from an eight
sessions hope therapy. Expert panel feedback and trial on targeted populations were
completed. Four participants received the program to determine its acceptability prior to
feasibility testing. The process and practical considerations were evaluated to allow
refinement of the program and to ensure the quality of intervention.
Outcome measures comprise of changes in state hope score and the depression scores measured
respectively by State Hope Scale and Centre for Epidemiological Study Depression Scale. The
secondary outcomes are the common signs and symptoms in cancer patients measured by The
Condensed Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale. Data collection will be done prior to the
intervention (baseline), immediately and one month after the intervention. Additional use of
qualitative interview to explore their experiences in the intervention, including
satisfaction with the intervention and the treatment fidelity will be conducted.
Introduction According to the Medical Research Council guidance, there are four critical
steps to systematically establish a standardize intervention content and mode of delivery
through phased approach. Theory and evidence-based practice, feasibility or piloting to test
the procedure, estimate recruitment/retention, determining sample size, evaluation and
implementation are the four keys of the best practice described in the guideline. In this
article, we reported three steps in developing an evidence-based intervention, namely brief
hope intervention that addresses the management of cancer and palliative care patients: (1)
preparation of the present program, (2) description of the protocol of the feasibility test,
and (3) an experimental study using wait list control design.
Background Hope intervention is grounded on positive psychology and is mapped onto
cognitive-behavioral therapy. It aligns with the 2014-2018 Oncology Nursing Society research
priorities, which indicated the need for evaluating the efficacy of integrating protective
factors, such as hope, to the care delivery to the patient and family caregivers. In a
similar vein, growing evidence has shown the increasing needs of quality palliative care for
non-cancer patients, who suffer from complex illnesses and progressing to end-of-life. These
patients having unpredictable disease trajectories, significant loss and grief, and
anticipated death would lead to depression and hopelessness. As such, the intervention
should be extended to non-cancer patients in their last phase of life. The goal of
health-promoting palliative care is to create a supportive environment and strengthen
actions that intervene along the journey of care giving, loss and death and dying. In a
systematic review, hope was found to account for therapeutic changes in clients with
depressive symptoms or chronic pain. Nevertheless, such active ingredients of the
psychotherapy are not standard elements of multi-modal care management. This warrants the
field testing of the present brief hope intervention in patients receiving palliative care.
Hope Theory Hope theory is adopted as the framework in the present study, where hope was
believed as the central agent to facilitate the change process. It focuses on three core
features: (1) goal setting (goals), (2) problem solving (pathways) and (3) positive
self-talk (agency). These elements underlie the key hope strategies used in the
intervention. By increasing hope level, the likelihood of therapeutic change will be
increased. Its current emphasis complemented the traditional cognitive behavioral therapy by
shifting the primary focus on positive potentials as the starting point, thereby promoting
meaning in life, fostering personal strengths, positive changes and improving well-being.
Some believed that being overly optimistic is harmful. However, nurturing hope was found to
be one of the significant elements in staying positive in the coping experiences of Chinese
couples living with cancer. Evidence has shown that high-hope individuals were found to be
more creative and effective problem solvers. More important, a number of studies have
reported the positive effect of hope in newly diagnosed cancer patient, for example, health,
quality of life, self-esteem, reduced major cancer symptoms, such as pain, fatigue, cough,
and depression in lung cancer patients or promoting positive changes in breast cancer
patients. However, many of these researches are cross-sectional surveys or qualitative
studies; others are mindfulness-based or spiritual-based interventions where hope is only
one of the active components in the program. Whether improving the hopeful state of cancer
patients and palliative care patients would lead to better clinical outcomes remains under
explored.
Brief Hope Intervention The present study aimed to examine the effectiveness of a brief hope
intervention in improving the hope level and the physical and mental health of cancer and
non-cancer Hong Kong Chinese patients who are receiving palliative care. This low intensity
psychological intervention can be delivered by caregiver such as nurses to address the needs
of these patients and to build their mental and/or physical abilities. Additionally, the
skills could be streamlined in daily nursing practice and an ongoing self-help strategy.
Would brief hope intervention be as effective as the standard session in clinical
population?
Optimal Length of Hope Intervention Preliminary evidence was found. Literature showed that
the role and value of hope at the early counseling sessions enhanced a literal shift to
experience a sense of worthiness. Focused hope intervention (90 minutes) has led to higher
level of hope and increase in perceived life meaning. The statistical robustness is
supported by the comparable effect sizes achieved by both the eight 2-hours sessions and the
90-minute single session in previous studies on hope therapy. The effect sizes on the agency
and pathway hope scale scores were 0.65 and 0.38 respectively in the long intervention, and
were 0.43 and 0.38 in the brief interventions. One large scale brief positive psychology
intervention with hope-based intervention (single session plus one booster session)
recruited 1,734 participants from the community, showed positive significant changes in
well-being and family happiness (ES 0.11-0.14) (Zhou et al., 2015). Encouraging results were
also demonstrated is other studies, which has tested a brief meaning in life intervention
for advanced cancer Chinese patients (2-sessions: 30-60 and 15-30 minutes respectively). It
showed improvement in quality of life and existential distress. Wong, Wong, & Chang (2015)
also found a four-sessions program (one visit plus three telephone follow up) effective in
reducing hospital readmission in community dwelling patients with chronic illnesses.
Nevertheless, there is insufficient evidence on the optimal length of hope intervention for
cancer and palliative patients that would produce the desired effect. Thus the present study
results could underpin effective palliative care provision across a range of services from
hospitalization to discharge facilitation.
Aims The primary research question is whether brief hope intervention would improve the
hopeful state and reduce physical symptoms and/or depression level of patients receiving
palliative care. Fidelity was assured at the design level and in intervention delivery to
establish a standardized procedure, skill adequacy and translating the intervention from
research into clinical practice.
Intervention Description of the intervention The present Brief Hope Intervention is a
four-weeks individual intervention, helping participants to develop positive thoughts
through skills in goal setting, problem solving and positive self-talk. The program consists
of four sessions in total: two face-to-face sessions (1-hour) and two telephone follow up
sessions (30 minutes) in between. This serves to create the momentum and continuity of
intervention. The first session is the core intervention and the final face-to-face session
is a summary talk. Two telephone follow up will review their progress and encourage the
practice of hope exercises. Hope enhancement strategies included sharing and recalling past
successes, hope-based goal mapping exercises, examining possible pathways to reach the
targeted goals, hope visualization exercise and positive self-talk. A booklet will be
prepared for the participants for reviewing their planned goals and recording achieved
targets. Successful experiences and solutions to perceived barriers are entered. Such
take-home exercise helps to extend the participants' practice of hope-based skills into
their daily living.
Design and Randomization This study is a randomized controlled trial. On completion of the
baseline assessment and the screening procedure, eligible participants will be randomly
assigned in equal number into either a brief hope intervention or the control group using
sets of computer-generated random numbers. The research assistant conducting the assessments
will be blinded to the treatment type. However, participants are inevitably aware of the
conditions they have been randomized to. To reduce expectancy effects of the advantages of
the program, the control arm is casted as a social intervention. Figure 1 presented the data
collection using the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials, which will be done before
the commencement of the intervention (Time1), immediately post-intervention (Time2) and one
month after the completion of program (Time 3).
Participants Chinese cancer and non-cancer patients in Hong Kong, who have completed the
curative treatment regimen (surgery and/or chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy) or not eligible
for the aforementioned treatment, but receiving palliative care will be invited to join the
study.
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