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A Randomized Controlled Evaluation of a Compassion-course for Healthcare Professionals (ICOP)

L

Linnaeus University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Compassion
Psychological Stress
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Occupational Health

Treatments

Behavioral: Internet-based compassion course for stress managemant
Behavioral: General Internet-based cognitive behavioural course for stress management

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04700878
2020-05505

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim is to investigate whether an internet-based compassion course of five modules contributes to reducing stress of conscience and work-related stress, increase the experience of professional quality of life and self-compassion in healthcare professionals.

Full description

Reactions to severe stress is one of the most common causes of sick leave in Sweden. Previous research has shown that compassion interventions for staff can affect work-related stress by increased self-care, better self-awareness and an increased healthy attitude, however, Swedish studies on the subject are scarce.

Compassion is a motivation to reduce suffering in oneself and others characterized by a warm, understanding, and respectful attitude. In addition to beneficial effects for the staff, a compassion-oriented approach, has shown to improve the relationship between patient and staff, increase patient satisfaction with care and reduce patient anxiety and stress. As a result of the covid-19 pandemic, healthcare professionals have been exposed to difficult physical and mental work conditions that cause feelings of stress and inadequacy. In the long run, increased stress can cause fatigue and increased number of sick leaves. This can in turn contribute to increased stress for the staff who remain working and difficulties to recruit new staff, which make the situation worse. There is a lack of interventions for staff aimed at preventing stress-related health issues, enabling recovery and reduce mental suffering linked to a stressful work situations. The aim of this study is to find a method that help healthcare providers cope with stress of conscience in relation to stressful work situations, particularly during the current covid-19 pandemic. A five week internet-based compassion course of five modules will be conducted and evaluated with the aim of exploring whether the course contributes to reduce stress of conscience and work-related stress, and increases the levels of professional quality of life and self-compassion among healthcare professionals. The internet-based compassion course will be compared with: one group that is on a waiting list for ten weeks and then receives an internet-based general stress management course and one group that participate in the general stress management course.

Enrollment

548 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

20+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

The inclusion criteria will be as follows: the participants work directly with patients full-time or part-time, score 45 points or higher on the primary outcome measure Stress of Conscience Questionnaire (SCQ), are proficient in Swedish, have the requisite time to attend a digital course, and accept the course's format.

The exclusion criteria include being partially or fully on sick leave due to stress.

All criteria are assessed on the basis of self-assessment forms of the participants, but in case of uncertainty, follow-up questions can be done by phone.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

548 participants in 3 patient groups

Internet-based compassion course
Experimental group
Description:
Therapist guided Internet-compassion course for workrelated stress.
Treatment:
Behavioral: General Internet-based cognitive behavioural course for stress management
General internet-based CBT stress management course
Active Comparator group
Description:
Therapist guided Internet-cognitive behavioral (CBT) course for workrelated stress.
Treatment:
Behavioral: General Internet-based cognitive behavioural course for stress management
Waitlist
Other group
Description:
Waitlist for 10 weeks, and thereafter the general internet-based CBT management course.
Treatment:
Behavioral: General Internet-based cognitive behavioural course for stress management
Behavioral: Internet-based compassion course for stress managemant

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Anna S Bratt, PhD; Maude Johansson, Phd

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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