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Assessing the Implementation and Feasibility of the SMART-MR

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University of Ottawa

Status

Completed

Conditions

Moral Injury

Treatments

Behavioral: Stress Management and Resilience Training - Moral Resilience (SMART-MR) program

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05122910
20210559-01H

Details and patient eligibility

About

The objective of the proposed pilot study is to assess the feasibility and implementation of the SMART-MR program, an integration of stress management, general resilience, and moral resilience skills, with frontline staff who provide direct patient care at The Ottawa Hospital (TOH).

Full description

Many of the sources of stress facing healthcare workers during the COVID-19 pandemic involve difficult ethical trade-offs that give rise to moral distress. Moral distress has personal consequences for healthcare workers, notably for their mental health, and wider consequences for the organization and health system as a whole as it negatively affects quality of care, patient satisfaction, and the recruitment, retention and satisfaction of staff. Moral resilience refers to the capacity of an individual to sustain or restore their integrity in response to moral adversity and has been raised as a potential way to mitigate moral distress.

The Stress Management and Resilience Training (SMART) program is one of the few evidence-based interventions designed to build resilience in healthcare workers. The SMART program is a brief, neuroscience-based intervention, typically delivered in a single 90-minute session. The structured program teaches self-care skills by developing intentional attention and the ability to reframe potentially stressful situations more quickly.

Recently, a modified version of the existing SMART program, SMART-Moral Resilience (SMART-MR), has been developed with an additional focus on reducing moral distress and building moral resilience for healthcare workers. The synergy of general resilience strategies with focus on the moral/ethical dimensions of clinical practice offer clinicians specific skills to address ethical challenges. We believe implementing the SMART-MR program with frontline staff during the COVID-19 pandemic is warranted. Therefore, we plan to pilot this innovative intervention at TOH to assess its feasibility and implementation.

Enrollment

98 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

• full-time or part-time TOH staff who provide direct patient care, including: attending physicians, nurses, allied health, social workers and spiritual care providers

Exclusion criteria

• TOH staff members who do not provide direct patient care

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

98 participants in 1 patient group

SMART-MR Program
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will participate in the Stress Management and Resilience Training - Moral Resilience (SMART-MR) program.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Stress Management and Resilience Training - Moral Resilience (SMART-MR) program

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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