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This study compares three different online psychological treatments for people with clinical burnout (stress-related exhaustion) who are on sick leave or have major difficulties coping at work or in daily life. Many patients with burnout receive broad, recuperation-focused interventions (rest, stress reduction, lifestyle changes), but there is still no clearly evidence-based treatment or agreed clinical model. It is also known that returning to work can be difficult, and there is a need for more structured support.
In this trial, 210 adults in Sweden with clinical burnout will be randomly assigned to one of three 10-week, internet-based treatments:
Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) A structured, values-based CBT approach that focuses on helping participants clarify what matters to them, relate differently to difficult thoughts and feelings, and gradually re-engage in meaningful activities despite exhaustion.
Online Recuperation-focused treatment An active comparison condition that emphasizes rest, recuperation, and healthy daily routines. It provides psychoeducation and practical tools for sleep, relaxation, physical activity, pacing, and balance in everyday life, but does not include ACT-specific methods such as exposure or values work.
Online ACT plus Vocational Support The same ACT program as in group 1, together with three additional sessions with a licensed psychologist focused on work. These sessions help the participant identify work-related barriers, plan a gradual return-to-work (RTW), and formulate a written RTW plan that can be shared with the employer and treating physician.
All three treatments are delivered via a secure digital platform. Participants work through weekly online modules, receive written feedback from a therapist, and have three video sessions during the 10-week period. Clinical psychology students in their final semester deliver the ACT and recuperation treatments, and licensed psychologists deliver the ACT + vocational support condition.
The study has two primary aims:
Key secondary outcomes include perceived stress, depression, anxiety, insomnia, everyday memory problems, quality of life, functional impairment, treatment response and remission, treatment credibility and satisfaction, and cost-effectiveness. Outcomes are measured before treatment, weekly during treatment (for selected measures), immediately after treatment, and at 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Sick-leave data are obtained from the Swedish Social Insurance Agency.
To be eligible, participants must be 18 years or older, have symptoms consistent with clinical burnout (including pronounced fatigue and reduced stress tolerance after prolonged psychosocial stress), be on at least 25% sick leave or have marked functional impairment due to these symptoms, have a stable occupation or study situation, and be able to read and write Swedish. People with very long sick leave (more than two years), severe psychiatric conditions (such as severe depression, bipolar disorder, untreated PTSD, or psychosis), current substance abuse, or active suicidal ideation will not be included.
Potential risks include temporary increases in distress, fatigue, or symptom awareness when working with emotions, behavior change, or work-related issues. Participants are monitored closely through weekly questionnaires and therapist contact. If risk for self-harm or serious deterioration is detected, a licensed psychologist will perform a risk assessment and, if needed, refer the participant to appropriate health care.
The hope is that this study will identify effective, scalable, and theory-based online treatments for clinical burnout and clarify whether adding structured vocational support improves long-term work outcomes.
Full description
Clinical burnout (also referred to as stress-related exhaustion) is a common reason for long-term sick leave in Sweden. Although many patients receive psychological or rehabilitative support, there is currently no established evidence-based treatment for clinical burnout, and the theoretical models guiding clinical care vary widely. Two dominant approaches in current practice are (1) recuperation-focused interventions emphasizing rest, balance, and lifestyle change, and (2) cognitive-behavioral approaches that aim to modify patterns of behavior and internal experience. Return-to-work (RTW) support is also widely regarded as important, yet structured, scalable, and well-defined RTW models tailored for burnout remain scarce.
This randomized controlled trial evaluates three 10-week online treatments for adults with clinical burnout:
Study Rationale Existing interventions for clinical burnout are often broad, multimodal, and resource-intensive. They may rely heavily on rest-based strategies and physiologically oriented explanations that risk reinforcing avoidance and passivity. ACT offers a theoretically coherent alternative that emphasizes behavioral re-engagement, values-based action, and psychological flexibility, which may be particularly relevant in burnout characterized by disengagement and rigid coping patterns.
At the same time, many patients with burnout struggle to return to work, and early coordination between the individual, employer, and health care system is often lacking. Integrating structured vocational support into an ACT treatment may help translate behavioral gains into improved work functioning.
Study Design This is a three-arm, parallel-group, randomized controlled superiority trial with a 1:1:1 allocation ratio. A total of 210 participants will be recruited across Sweden and randomized to one of the three interventions. Treatments are delivered over 10 weeks via the secure digital platform BASS. Each treatment includes 10 self-guided online modules, therapist feedback via weekly written chat, and three scheduled video sessions. The ACT + Vocational arm includes three additional vocational sessions.
All assessments, consent procedures, and follow-ups are conducted online. Registry data on sick leave will be obtained from the Swedish Social Insurance Agency for the 12 months following treatment, allowing for objective evaluation of long-term functional recovery.
Assessments occur at baseline, weekly during treatment (selected measures), mid-treatment, post-treatment, and at 6- and 12-month follow-up.
Intervention Delivery and Therapist Training Therapists in the ACT and Recuperation conditions are clinical psychology students in their final semester who have completed training in CBT. Licensed psychologists with experience in rehabilitation deliver the ACT + Vocational condition. All therapists receive structured protocols, two days of training, and weekly supervision to ensure consistent delivery and fidelity across conditions.
Primary Objectives Symptom reduction Evaluate whether ACT produces greater improvements in self-rated burnout symptoms than a recuperation-focused treatment at post-treatment and at follow-up.
Return-to-work outcomes Determine whether adding structured vocational support to ACT reduces the number of registered net sick-leave days during the 12 months after treatment.
Secondary and Exploratory Objectives Secondary objectives include comparing treatments on perceived stress, depression, anxiety, insomnia, everyday memory problems, quality of life, functional impairment, treatment adherence, treatment response and remission, and adverse effects. Process outcomes (e.g., psychological flexibility, recuperation behaviors, RTW self-efficacy) will also be assessed to examine change processes.
Economic evaluations will estimate cost-effectiveness from healthcare and societal perspectives. A qualitative sub-study will explore participants' experiences of ACT and, to a smaller extent, the other treatment arms.
Statistical Overview Repeated self-report outcomes will be analyzed using linear mixed-effects models with fixed effects for group, time, and group × time interactions, and random effects for participants. Sick-leave outcomes will be analyzed using negative binomial or Poisson regression models. All primary analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle. Sensitivity, adjusted, and missing-data analyses (including multiple imputation) are planned.
The study is powered to detect small-to-moderate between-group effects on symptom trajectories and medium-sized differences in sick leave.
Data Monitoring and Safety Given the low-risk, non-pharmacological nature of the interventions, no independent data monitoring committee is established. Participants are monitored weekly, including automated alerts for worsening symptoms. Emergent risk (e.g., suicidal ideation) triggers same-day assessment by a licensed psychologist.
Adverse events will be recorded systematically during and after treatment.
Expected Contributions This study directly compares two theoretically distinct treatment models for clinical burnout and evaluates whether structured vocational support enhances functional recovery. It is among the first trials to assess an integrated, scalable ACT-based model for clinical burnout delivered entirely online. Findings may help identify effective strategies for reducing symptoms, supporting return to work, and informing the development of future evidence-based guidelines for clinical burnout.
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210 participants in 3 patient groups
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Jakob Clason van de Leur, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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