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This is a pilot study consisting of mixed-methods, pre-post evaluation of a gratitude intervention (gratitude letter and visit) on palliative care patients and their caregivers.
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Study background and aims:
Gratitude, defined as an "other-oriented" emotion, has shown to impact significantly on many relevant dimensions for palliative care (e.g. well-being, psychological distress and the quality of relationships). Various psychological interventions focused on the enhancement of the feeling of gratitude have been developed and assessed but mostly in non-clinical populations and never taking into account the relationship dimension as an outcome.
The fact that the relational component has never been addressed in interventional studies is all the more surprising since several experimental and non-clinical studies have clearly shown an association between gratitude and feeling of social affiliation, relational commitment, satisfaction with relationships or partner reciprocal maintenance behaviours. These results appear to be very promising for palliative care since interpersonal (and particularly familial) relationships are crucial for palliative care patients: the relational sphere represents a major predictor contributing to both their meaning in life and their quality of life. We hypothesize that considering this concept in palliative care could benefit both the patients and their relatives.
Thus, the purpose of this research is to conduct a pilot study before a possible randomized controlled multicenter trial whose final aim will be to examine whether a gratitude-based intervention in a palliative care setting can increase the quality of life and the quality of the relationship of patients and their caregivers and decrease their psychological distress and burden.
The specific aims of this pilot study are:
(i) to realize a cross-cultural translation of outcome measures that are not yet available in French (ii) to establish the feasibility of the study design (iii) to investigate the appropriateness of the gratitude concept and the gratitude-based intervention in the palliative care context, and finally (iv) to explore the sensitivity to change of our selected measures in order to calculate a sample size.
Procedure and measures:
Quantitative data will be collected at baseline (T0) and post-intervention (T1) with validated questionnaires. The intervention will last for one week. Five to ten days after T1, qualitative data will be collected from semi-structured interviews with the participants and from the content of the gratitude letters to explore their representations of the gratitude concept and their perception of the intervention.
The intervention includes the following steps:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Only patients fulfilling all of the following inclusion criteria are eligible for the study:
In this research, a caregiver is defined as "a person who devotes time to help a family member or a friend affected in her/his health or autonomy. The caregiver assures, in a non-professional and regular way, a presence and a support to help her/him in his difficulties and assures her/his safety. The caregiver can be a friend, a family member or a neighbour" (Vaud canton definition). This definition will be the basis for the palliative patient to identify his caregiver.
The presence of any one of the following exclusion criteria will lead to exclusion of the patient:
Only caregivers fulfilling all of the following inclusion criteria are eligible for the study:
The presence of any one of the following exclusion criteria will lead to exclusion of the caregivers:
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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