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The goal of this two-armed randomised controlled trial is to evaluate a psychosocial self-management mobile app providing bereavement support to adolescents in grief. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Participants will:
Researchers will compare the intervention group with the control group to see if the app has an effect on bereaved adolescents mental health.
Full description
The need for professional support is evident in teenagers' grief and approximately half of the bereaved teenagers in Sweden report feeling in need of some type of help or support. Some teenagers in bereavement find it hard to seek help or that seeking help is embarrassing. It could also be hard to recognise if and when they need help, as they might have a low level of knowledge regarding symptoms of grief. Children and teenagers in need of preventive interventions often do not receive the care they need, but effective preventive interventions can support bereaved teenagers to work through their grief adaptively and thus decrease the risk of the negative consequences and complications of loss, such as experiencing complicated grief, depression or post-traumatic stress. This may in turn reduce the need for clinical interventions for psychopathology.
A mobile app could be used as a platform for bereavement support and be a comforting aid available to bereaved teenagers without drawing the attention or knowledge of their peers. Web-based support can lead to younger people seek help at an earlier stage, due to lower stigmatisation. Mobile apps offer additional advantage over face-to-face and web-based interventions because of their availability, accessibility, the immediate support they can provide, and their anonymity (e.g., reducing barriers to seeking help for grief), low costs, and possible tailoring to the user (e.g., the user is in control over when and how to use the app). Therefore, mobile health (mHealth) offers a particularly great and ubiquitous platform for delivering mental health and supportive interventions to teenagers. However, there are few apps for children and teenagers and the benefit of mHealth for children is largely not evaluated. With this background, the research group has using Patient- and Public Involvement worked with 6 bereaved teenagers to develop a psychosocial self-management mobil app for adolescents in grief.
The overall purpose of this project is to evaluate a psychosocial self-management mobile app to provide bereavement support and self-help strategies to adolescents who have lost a parent or a sibling in fatal causes, in a randomised controlled trial. In order to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention in bereaved teenagers, the trial will include a pilot phase during which results for recruitment, drop-out randomisation, retention rates and data collection will be used to identify and analyse potential issues with the trial before progression. Data related to the feasibility of the intervention and the accessibility of the app will in addition be collected during the post-assessment and be used to identify needed modifications for the app and the intervention. This data will, along with user-data, be used for evaluation of how bereaved adolescents use and engage with the app. To evaluate the effects of the app on bereaved adolescents mental health symptoms of grief, complicated grief, depression and post-traumatic stress will be measure at baseline, post 2 months of app/website usage, and at 6- and 12 months post randomisation, and compared between the intervention- and control group. Finally, to evaluate the meaningfulness of using the app and the self-perceived effect of the app intervention on bereaved adolescents' grieving process and everyday life, 10-15 participants of the intervention group will be asked to participate in narrative interviews. participants will be recruited using advertisement and in cooperation with non-profit organisations.
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126 participants in 2 patient groups
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Josefin Sveen, PhD; Rakel Eklund, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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