Protocol for a partially nested randomised controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of the scleroderma patient-centered intervention network COVID-19 home-isolation activities together (SPIN-CHAT) program to reduce anxiety among at-risk scleroderma patients.

Clicks: 224
ID: 107646
2020
Contagious disease outbreaks and related restrictions can lead to negative psychological outcomes, particularly in vulnerable populations at risk due to pre-existing medical conditions. No randomised controlled trials (RCTs) have tested interventions to reduce mental health consequences of contagious disease outbreaks. The primary objective of the Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network COVID-19 Home-isolation Activities Together (SPIN-CHAT) Trial is to evaluate the effect of a videoconference-based program on symptoms of anxiety. Secondary objectives include evaluating effects on symptoms of depression, stress, loneliness, boredom, physical activity, and social interaction.The SPIN-CHAT Trial is a pragmatic RCT that will be conducted using the SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort, a sub-cohort of the SPIN Cohort. Eligible participants will be SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort participants without a positive COVID-19 test, with at least mild anxiety (PROMIS Anxiety 4a v1.0 T-score ≥ 55), not working from home, and not receiving current counselling or psychotherapy. We will randomly assign 162 participants to intervention groups of 7 to 10 participants each or waitlist control. We will use a partially nested RCT design to reflect dependence between individuals in training groups but not in the waitlist control. The SPIN-CHAT Program includes activity engagement, education on strategies to support mental health, and mutual participant support. Intervention participants will receive the 4-week (3 sessions per week) SPIN-CHAT Program via videoconference. The primary outcome is PROMIS Anxiety 4a score immediately post-intervention.The SPIN-CHAT Trial will test whether a brief videoconference-based intervention will improve mental health outcomes among at-risk individuals during contagious disease outbreak.
Reference Key
thombs2020protocoljournal Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Thombs, Brett D;Kwakkenbos, Linda;Carrier, Marie-Eve;Bourgeault, Angelica;Tao, Lydia;Harb, Sami;Gagarine, Maria;Rice, Danielle;Bustamante, Laura;Ellis, Kelsey;Duchek, Delaney;Wu, Yin;Bhandari, Parash Mani;Neupane, Dipika;Carboni-Jiménez, Andrea;Henry, Richard S;Krishnan, Ankur;Sun, Ying;Levis, Brooke;He, Chen;Turner, Kimberly A;Benedetti, Andrea;Culos-Reed, Nicole;El-Baalbaki, Ghassan;Hebblethwaite, Shannon;Bartlett, Susan J;Dyas, Laura;Patten, Scott;Varga, John;, ;, ;
Journal Journal of psychosomatic research
Year 2020
DOI S0022-3999(20)30400-1
URL
Keywords

Citations

No citations found. To add a citation, contact the admin at info@scimatic.org

No comments yet. Be the first to comment on this article.