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Examining the Efficacy of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Microinterventions for Distressed First-Generation College Students (CompACT)

University of Wisconsin (UW) logo

University of Wisconsin (UW)

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 1

Conditions

Mood Change
Self-Assessment
Psychological Distress

Treatments

Behavioral: compACT Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04081662
Biostat & Med (Other Identifier)
A538900 (Other Identifier)
2019-0819
SMPH/PSYCHIATRY/PSYCHIATRY (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research study aims to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and effectiveness of a micro-randomized acceptance and commitment therapy-based (ACT-based) intervention that is delivered to distressed first-generation college students.

Full description

The transition to college is associated with a number of changes in health behaviors and mental health functioning, with 50% of college students meeting criteria for a psychiatric disorder. In particular, first-generation college students may be at particular risk for increased stress and mental health difficulties. The development of effective psychotherapeutic interventions is essential in providing adequate care to young adults during the transitional years of college. Delivery of these interventions via acceptable and feasible modalities for this population is also of utmost importance so that utilization and engagement are prioritized. Brief interventions have been a point of emphasis in recent years from the perspective of patient and provider efficiency, as well as many studies indicating effectiveness of brief interventions in creating and sustaining clinical levels of change.

The current study seeks to evaluate the effectiveness of brief interventions delivered via a smartphone app, or "microinterventions", based in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT). ACT is a cognitive-behavioral therapy that seeks to promote psychological flexibility. ACT is transdiagnostic, meaning that it is designed to target human suffering, rather than a particular psychological or physical disorder. ACT targets experiential avoidance, which is the inability or unwillingness to make contact with painful experiences (e.g., thoughts, emotions, memories. Avoidance provides short-term relief, but exacerbates the long-term experience of the avoided stimulus in terms of intensity and duration. The microintervention in this study will consist of one of 84 prompts that aim to target one of 6 processes targeted in ACT. For example, one prompt is "Do your current actions align with what matters most to you?" Delivery of these prompts (e.g., whether and when to deliver which prompt) is randomized to allow for secondary analyses of optimal delivery of the microintervention in addition to primary analyses of its effectiveness.

Enrollment

36 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 19 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Willing to provide informed consent.
  2. Willing to comply with all study procedures and be available for the duration of the study.
  3. Individuals 18-19 years of age.
  4. Individuals who are full-time freshman or sophomore students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  5. Fluent in written English.
  6. Has access to a smartphone.
  7. First-generation college student.
  8. Significant subjective distress (endorses distress on at least 4 out of the past 7 days that interfered with functioning in screening survey).

Exclusion criteria

  1. Expected life expectancy <6 months.
  2. Use of investigational drugs, biologics, or devices within 30 days prior to randomization.
  3. Not suitable for study participation due to other reasons at the discretion of the investigators.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

36 participants in 1 patient group

compACT Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
At every time-point of the study, participants will complete self-reports of stress, (as measured by the PSS-4) distress (as measured by the PHQ-2), and activity through the mobile app Lorevimo. After completing these assessments, participants will be randomly assigned to either receive one additional ACT-based microintervention question or receive no additional question. The microintervention will consist of one of 84 prompts that aim to target one of 6 processes targeted in ACT (contacting the present moment, defusion, acceptance, self-as-context, values, and committed action). The ACT-based questions were developed by the research team as a unique intervention for the current study. They are based upon core themes of acceptance and commitment therapy: engagement, awareness, and openness.
Treatment:
Behavioral: compACT Intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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