My Grief - an App for Parents With Prolonged Grief After Losing a Child to Cancer
- Conditions
- Prolonged Grief Disorder
- Interventions
- Other: My Grief
- Registration Number
- NCT04552717
- Lead Sponsor
- Uppsala University
- Brief Summary
Bereaved parents are at increased risk of developing mental and physical health problems and bereavement is even associated with an increased risk of mortality, especially in mothers. Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) are persistent and intensive grief reactions which can persist for years. It is characterized by an intense and lasting yearning for the deceased, intense emotional pain, such as difficulty accepting the loss and an inability to experience positive mood. Parents are among the most vulnerable to develop PGD.
The goal is to increase the accessibility to evidence-based and cost-effective interventions for parents of children who have died of cancer, and thus facilitate the grieving process and decrease the risk for parents to develop long-term distress.
Specific aims are:
* To evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of a mobile app, "My Grief ", a self-help app for prolonged grief, in parents who lost a child to cancer.
* To evaluate possible beneficial effects of the mobile app on parents' mental health.
- Detailed Description
There is a lack of studies evaluating the effect of interventions for bereaved parents. Thus, there is a need for accessible interventions with documented efficacy for preventing or reducing negative mental health consequences after the loss of a child. Today, many individuals carry smartphones and these devices can be used to access self-help interventions aiming to improve both physical and mental health. Currently, there are an excess of apps available for smartphone users that assert that they help people with their physical or mental health. However, for most of these apps, there is a lack of empirical support, i.e., their efficacy is unknown. It is therefore important to evaluate mobile apps in scientific studies with rigorous designs. In addition, before conducting rigorous studies of novel psychosocial interventions, such as a mobile app, it is important to conduct more basic work evaluating development and feasibility of the intervention. One such self-help app, the PTSD Coach, has been evaluated in a randomized controlled trial conducted with traumatized participants recruited from the community, which found that access to the PTSD Coach app was associated with improvements in posttraumatic stress (PTS) symptoms, depression, and psychosocial functioning. The PTSD Coach app is based on cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) principles and there is a growing body of evidence that elements of CBT are effective interventions for prolonged grief. Thus, an app targeting prolonged grief using elements of CBT could potentially be effective in improving the mental health in bereaved parents. To our knowledge no such app has been developed and evaluated. The Grief Coach app will be based on the smartphone app PTSD Coach. A Swedish version of the PTSD Coach has been developed and a pilot study has been conducted as well as an ongoing RCT. Consultant programmers at Uppsala University will develop the mobile app. The content of the app will be developed together with experts in the field of grief, inspired by other grief apps and CBT therapy manuals, to modify parts of the PTSD Coach app to grief.
The main aim of this study is to examine the effectiveness of the app My Grief as compared to a waiting list comparison in reducing symptoms of prolonged grief in bereaved parents. The primary hypothesis is that the parents in the intervention group will report decreased levels of prolonged grief symptoms after having used the app. A second aim is to examine the effect of the app on related mental health problems (posttraumatic stress symptoms, depression symptoms, quality of life) and cognitive behavioral variables putatively explaining the effect of CBT techniques (i.e., grief avoidance, grief rumination and negative grief cognitions). The secondary hypotheses are that the parents in the intervention group will report improved mental health (i.e., lower symptom levels of depression and posttraumatic stress, higher quality of life), and lower grief avoidance, grief rumination, negative grief-related cognitions. A third aim is to evaluate the feasibility of the app, including participant satisfaction, evaluation of the app's strengths and weaknesses, and adverse events.
Potential participants are identified using the Swedish Childhood Cancer Registry, the Cause of Death Registry, and the Swedish Population Register at the Swedish Tax Agency. By linking the Cause of Death Registry with the Swedish Childhood Cancer Registry, children diagnosed with a malignancy and who died due to the malignancy 1 to 10 years previously will be identified. Next, the children's parents/caregivers are identified through the Swedish Population Register and will be sent a letter with an invitation to participate in the study. Participants will complete a web based pre-assessment and then given access to the app for three months followed by a web based post-assessment and an interview via telephone regarding their experiences of using the app, with follow-ups att 6 and 12 months.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 248
- Parents/caregivers of children who have died of cancer, at the earliest 12 month ago
- Have symptoms of prolonged grief (PGD)
- Understand Swedish language
- Have access to a smartphone
- Ongoing severe psychiatric problems (e.g. suicidal thoughts, psychosis)
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention My Grief Participants will complete a web based pre-assessment and then given access to the app "My Grief" for three months followed by a web based post-assessment and an interview via telephone regarding their experiences of using the app, and follow-up questionnaires.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change (from baseline) in Prolonged Grief Disorder-13 instrument, PG-13 3, 6 and 12 months 13-item, self-rated measure of prolonged grief, total score ranges from 11 to 55, where a higher score indicates more symptoms
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change (from baseline) in Posttraumatic stress disorder checklist for DSM-5, PCL-5 3, 6 and 12 months 20-item, self-rated measure of posttraumatic stress disorder, total score range from 0-80, and a higher score indicates more symptoms
Change (from baseline) in Patient Health Questionnaire, PHQ-9 3, 6 and 12 months 9-item, self-rated measure of depression, total score ranges from 0-27, and a higher score indicates more symptoms
Change (from baseline) in Utrecht Grief Rumination Scale, UGRS 3, 6 and 12 months 15-item, self-rated measure of grief rumination, total scores range from 15 to 75, and a higher score indicates more grief rumination
Change (from baseline) in Depressive and Anxious Avoidance in Prolonged Grief questionnaire 3, 6 and 12 months 9-item, self-rated measure of avoidance, total score ranges from 9-72, and a higher score indicates more avoidance
Change (from baseline) in 18 items from the Grief Cognitions Questionniare, GCQ 3, 6 and 12 months 18-items, self-rated measure of grief cognitions, total score ranges from 0-90, and a higher score indicates more grief cognitions
Change (from baseline) in Brunnsviken Brief Quality of Life Inventory, BBQ 3, 6 and 12 months 12 items, self-rated measure of quality of life, covering six different life domains, Total score ranges from 0-96, higher scores indicates higher quality of life.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
National Centre for Disaster Psychiatry, Department of Neuroscience, Uppsala university
🇸🇪Uppsala, Sweden