PTSD Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Development and Evaluation of a Brief Self-practice Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT) Intervention as an Adjunct to TAU for Trauma Patients
**PLEASE NOTE** this study is currently open only to clients on the waiting list at the
Centre for Trauma Resilience and Growth, UK.
The project will involve adapting and implementing a five minute daily self-practice
compassion-focused intervention and evaluate its impact on psychological and physiological
factors associated with trauma. It aims to offer a novel intervention which may facilitate
further benefits from trauma specific therapy. This would be a unique use of self-practice
Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT) specifically for trauma clients. Previous research has found
that many factors can impact on client's benefitting from therapy, including depression,
anxiety and self-criticism. These things also get in the way of being compassionate towards
oneself, and this can be a difficulty for people who have experienced traumatic events.
Service users have identified that additional support before trauma specific therapy can be
useful and this may offer a positive use of time whilst on therapy waiting lists.
Hypotheses:
i. A brief CFT intervention will decrease levels of depression, anxiety, stress and increase
baseline Heart Rate Variability.
ii. The compassion focused intervention will increase experiences of self-compassion, social
safeness, and reduce levels of self-criticism.
iii. High 'fear of compassion' will moderate the impact of the intervention and result in
smaller changes in depression, anxiety, stress and post traumatic change.
Clients of the Centre for trauma, resilience and growth will be approached to participate in
the study. All participants will have experienced trauma for which they are seeking
psychological support. The current compassion focused intervention will be offered to
participants on the waiting list for trauma specific therapy at the trauma centre. Each
participant will be asked to practice the intervention in their own time over a period of
three weeks. There will be initial assessments, repeated assessments following the
intervention, and repeated assessments pre and post trauma specific therapies engaged in.
The project will implement a five-minute daily self-practice CFT intervention and evaluate
its impact on psychological and physiological factors associated with trauma. It aims to
offer a novel intervention which may facilitate further benefits from trauma-specific
therapy. Follow-up data may demonstrate maintenance of positive effects and increased
positive effects if self-practice is continued. This would be a unique use of self-practice
CFT specifically for trauma clients.
Study Design The study will use a delayed intervention Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT)
using a block design.A delayed intervention group will act as a passive control group.
Participants will engage in a daily five-minute self-practice CFT intervention prior to
engaging in trauma-specific TAU. The CFT intervention will be adapted specifically for trauma
clients based on the literature review, involvement of service users, and close collaboration
with Professor Paul Gilbert. The project will involve three stages, outlined below.
Stage One: Development of CFT intervention and feasibility testing
Development The final version of the adapted five-minute CFT practice will include
consultation with Paul Gilbert as original author of the five-minute CFT intervention
(unpublished) as well as consultation with research supervisors. It will be available in both
audio and written format. Permission has kindly been given by Paul Gilbert to adapt this for
use in the project.
The current version of the CFT intervention includes: instructions, an explanation of
compassion and aims of the intervention. It includes several exercises designed to increase
self-compassion including breathing exercises and compassionate imagery exercises focused on
self and others.
Throughout the adaptation process, services users' ideas will be considered. The intervention
will include explicit instructions not to focus on traumatic events participants have
experienced. This will be addressed in their trauma-specific therapy . Participants will be
encouraged to focus on milder difficulties and stressors. The adaptations will account for
the current literature in CFT and maintain its basic principles, focusing on building
self-compassion and reducing self-criticism.
Participant sampling for feasibility testing will be opportunistic, seeking voluntary
engagement from clients currently accessing services. The sample size for this stage is not
explicitly defined and will depend on the number of interested parties. This aims to test
feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and its instructions with a clinical
population. Participants will be asked to practice the intervention over a two-week period.
Stage Two: Randomised controlled trial Design The research will utilise a single-blind
blocked-randomisation design, incorporating three-week intervention versus waiting-list
blocks. Following the end of the initial block, participants who formed the passive,
waiting-list group will engage in the active intervention, whilst the active group will
continue to remain on the waiting list. Both routine and project-specific outcomes measures
will be implemented.
Therapists from the recruitment site will conduct screening assessments and post TAU
assessments. All other measurements will be completed with the primary researcher.
Prospective participants will be provided with an information sheet as part of the screening
interview and, if they consent, will be contacted by the researcher. They will be given the
opportunity to ask questions and be asked to sign a consent form if they wish to participate.
It will be made clear that non-participation will have no adverse effects on their access to
psychological treatment and that engaging in the project will not affect their access to
treatment. An initial appointment will then be made and the pre-intervention assessments
completed. Participants will be allocated to the CFT or waiting-list condition using blocked
randomisation. Self-report measures will be uploaded to an academically-focused online survey
tool (eSurv) and participants will have Heart Rate Variability (HRV) measurements taken
during face-to-face appointments with the primary researcher.
The five-minute CFT self-practice intervention will be available both in written and audio
(CD and mp3) formats. Participants will receive a daily email or text reminder to practice
the intervention if deemed appropriate. Participants will be given the choice to complete a
daily monitoring sheet or have their daily online access monitored to record levels of CFT
practice. Participants will be asked to practice the intervention on a daily basis for three
weeks with repeated completion of the online assessments and the HRV measurements in the week
following the block.
An a priori power calculation was obtained using G*Power 3.1.9 software (Faul, Erdfelder,
Buchner & Lang, 2009). With the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-21: Lovibond &
Lovibond, 1995) as the primary outcome measure, the average effect size of a brief CFT
intervention on the DASS was equivalent to a large effect size f of .74 (McEwan & Gilbert,
2013). An average estimate of test-retest reliability is 0.77 (Brown, Chorpita, Korotitsch &
Barlow, 1997).
Given the number of groups (2) and repetitions (4) in the planned study and assuming a
test-retest reliability of .77, a sample size of at least 16 (8 per group) will be required
to provide sufficient power (80%) to detect an effect of similar magnitude (f = .74) at an
alpha level of .05.
Average attrition rates for clients with PTSD are approximately 20%, although rates vary up
to 48% (Imel, Laska, Jakupcak & Simpson, 2013). A cautious 60% (approx.) attrition rate has
been considered given the research is additional to participants' involvement at the CTRG.
Further allowing room for a more moderate effect size, given that the intervention has not
previously been trialled with a clinical sample, a target sample of 40 participants will be
sought. Given the 150 referrals received by the CTRG last year this is feasible.
Withdrawal Participants will be assigned a code number with which all of their assessment
data will be stored on a password-protected computer file. This will be accessible only to
the researcher and any transferring of data will be done using an encrypted memory stick. Any
personal data used to contact participants will be deleted upon completion of the
experimental aspects of the project. Participants can withdraw at any time but will be
informed that any data collected past the first week of the intervention process cannot be
erased and may still be used in the project analyses. Consent forms will be signed and will
be stored in a locked filing cabinet at the researcher's home office and transferred to the
University of Lincoln's archived storage following project completion. Data will be stored
for seven years in line with the University's data storage policy.
Implications and Dissemination This research project will contribute to the theoretical
literature on both CFT and PTSD. It is anticipated that it will offer new findings regarding
self-practice interventions for PTSD which may have beneficial psychological and
physiological implications and impact on TAU outcomes. The project will be prepared for
publication in an appropriate peer-reviewed journal and presented at relevant conferences. It
may also be disseminated on the Compassion Mind Foundation Website.
In the event that any participants find the intervention difficult or experience distress,
they will be able to discuss this with an identified person and if deemed appropriate, will
be withdrawn from the project. Research suggests continued practice may reduce fear of
compassion (Rockliff, et al. 2008) and this information will be shared with participants. It
is felt that the risk of such adverse events is minimal.
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