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Adaptation of Mindfulness Training to Treat Moral Injury in Veterans

Old Dominion University logo

Old Dominion University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

Mindfulness
Educational Support

Treatments

Behavioral: Mindfulness
Behavioral: Educational Support

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05341882
0414484650000

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project is highly innovative as it will be the first to develop a mindfulness-based treatment as a first-line intervention tailored to target moral injury among combat-wounded veterans. In Study 1, the investigators recruited a small group of veterans to give feedback on the project. In Studies 2 and 3, the investigators will compare the newly developed mindfulness training to an equally intensive Educational Support condition. Further, if successful, this application may have the ability to adapted and extended to address common to other professions that experience moral injury.

Full description

Combat theaters place service members in situations where they make difficult decisions that may transgress deeply held moral beliefs or witness others' acts of betrayal. Although many veterans are resilient to these types of experiences, for others, failure to accommodate these events may result in internal conflict that is theorized to lead to the development of moral injury. Moral injury is distinct from posttraumatic stress disorder and has been associated with poor mental health outcomes (e.g., depression, anxiety, suicidality) and alcohol/drug use among veterans. Few evidence-based interventions have been developed to target symptoms of moral injury. In studies with combat wounded veterans, community veterans, and a predominantly VA treatment-seeking sample, the investigators have demonstrated that mindfulness moderates associations between moral injury symptoms and negative mental health outcomes. In addition, the investigators have demonstrated that combat wounded veterans are willing to take part in a mindfulness-based moral injury intervention, especially if administered in an online interactive web-based program. Using an iterative developmental process, the goal of this project is to adapt an integrative and theory-driven mindfulness-based intervention delivered online to target moral injury in combat wounded veterans. Aim 1 is to modify an evidence-based, online, interactive, instructor-delivered, six-session mindfulness program, originally designed to help active duty members manage physical pain (i.e., Mindfulness to Manage Chronic Pain), such that it addresses the psychologically painful symptoms (e.g., guilt, shame) characteristic of those with moral injury. The newly adapted program, Mindfulness to Manage Moral Injury (MMMI), will then be piloted with one group of eligible veterans (N = 6) to generate qualitative feedback on program content and format; revisions based on this feedback will result in preliminary manualization. Subsequently, in Aim 2 the investigators propose to develop a facilitator-led online interactive Education Support (ES) program designed to serve as a control comparison intervention, and then carry out a non-randomized pilot study comparing the feasibility (i.e., credibility, acceptability, study completion, and adherence (e.g., to homework assignments) of ES to the revised MMMI program with N = 20 (10 MMMI; 10 ES) recent-era veterans. Following this phase of feasibility testing, the investigative team will collect qualitative information and further refine both the MMMI and ES materials. In Aim 3, the investigators propose a small-scale randomized controlled trial (N = 42 combat wounded veterans; 21 MMMI; 21 ES) to collect data on recruitment, credibility and acceptability, completion rates, and adherence in the two newly refined intervention arms at pre-post-test. Aim 3 will assess for potential primary and secondary outcome measures and lay the groundwork for a large-scale randomized R01 controlled efficacy trial. If supported, this work would have the potential to provide a novel and flexible theoretically grounded form of treatment delivered in-home for combat wounded veterans experiencing moral injury symptoms and associated mental health problems.

Enrollment

75 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Post 9/11 veterans who were deployed to Iraq/Afghanistan regions 1 or more times
  2. Report 2 or more symptoms of moral injury

Exclusion criteria

  1. They have a probable psychotic disorder (as determined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-5 Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure-Adult)

    or

  2. They have a current suicide plan

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

75 participants in 2 patient groups

Mindfulness
Experimental group
Description:
The seven weekly sessions teach veterans how to use mindfulness techniques in everyday life and when dealing with stress and negative emotions related to moral injury.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness
Educational Support
Active Comparator group
Description:
As an active control condition, the investigators developed an education support (ES) group, which ran concurrently to the mindfulness intervention group. Within the military community, peer support and psychoeducation are considered critical components of alleviation of suffering from traumatic exposure.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Educational Support

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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