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Loneliness and Health: The Moderating Role of Befriending Services (HALO)

U

University of Dublin, Trinity College

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Loneliness

Treatments

Behavioral: befriending

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04301167
APA2017004

Details and patient eligibility

About

Befriending services deliver companionship to older adults through regular volunteer visits. ALONE is a charitable organisation providing befriending services to older adults in Ireland. It is the mission statement of ALONE to use befriending to reduce the negative impact loneliness has on health, but evidence for this use of befriending is yet to be sufficiently provided. Providing such evidence would help organisations like ALONE to convince policymakers of the need for, and importance of, their services. The research uses a rigorous scientific approach to evaluate the effect of befriending services on health. Two domains of health thought to be particularly important for ageing adults are evaluated: health-related quality of life (HrQoL), and cognitive function. Maximising HrQoL should be a goal of any healthcare intervention, while cognitive function is associated with dementia risk, a major factor threatening independence in later life. The research is also investigating whether befriending can reduce the negative effect that loneliness is known to have on health of older adults. Service users, befriending volunteers, and professionals involved with the service, will be interviewed by researchers, to see if there are other ways that befriending might improve health. An economic analysis of the service, to evaluate its cost, is also planned. Findings will then be translated all findings into befriending service recommendations for the Department of Health.

To conduct this research, 85 new befriending service users are needed. 10-15 pairs of befriender-befriendees will also be interviewed, and 5-10 health and social care professionals involved with the service. Expected outcomes are to provide ALONE with scientific evidence related to the effects of befriending services on health, and to influence policymakers by clarifying the extent of the economic and health benefits of befriending services.

Full description

Background: Loneliness is related to poor health in later life. One way in which loneliness is often addressed is via befriending services, such as those offered by ALONE. The mission statement of ALONE's befriending service is to reduce the impact of loneliness on poor health. ALONE have identified a need for an empirical evaluation of the potential benefits of befriending services. Aims: The proposed research aims to create empirical evidence regarding the impact of befriending services on health and loneliness, assisting ALONE in developing and refining their mission statement. The research question is: "Do befriending services improve health (measured as health-related quality of life and cognitive function), and do they mitigate the impact of loneliness on health?" A secondary aim is to identify, using exploratory methods, potential mechanisms through which befriending impacts health.

Plan of Investigation: A mixed methods design, integrating qualitative and quantitative methods, is planned.

The quantitative component comprises an AB single-case experimental multiple baseline design, analysed using generalised additive modelling, and the qualitative component comprises semi-structured interviews (with befriender-befriendee dyads and healthcare professionals associated with the service) designed and analysed according to the principles of grounded theory. Results will be integrated according to mixed methods guidelines, undergo triangulation, and an economic analysis will evaluate the cost should the service be rolled out nationally. All results will be integrated to form the basis of recommendations for the befriending sector, to be disseminated to policymakers. Results will also be disseminated via peer-reviewed publication and lay report.

Potential Impact: The study has potential to improve the service offered by ALONE by empirically testing its effectiveness and mechanisms of action, influence policy with this information, and contribute to theoretical understanding of the nature of the relationship between befriending, loneliness, and health.

Enrollment

85 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • being interested in becoming an ALONE befriending service user
  • being aged over 60
  • having ability to provide informed consent
  • having sufficient sensory ability to engage in an interview (if engaging in qualitative component of study)
  • self-report of loneliness (responds yes to the question "do you sometimes feel lonely?")

Exclusion criteria

  • self-report of receipt of a diagnosis by a doctor of any of the following: intellectual disability including autism spectrum disorder or psychotic disorder, dementia, or serious memory impairment
  • Living outside the greater Dublin area

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

85 participants in 1 patient group

Single group
Experimental group
Description:
An AB single-case experimental design will be used. An RCT would be inappropriate since the befriending intervention is known to improve wellbeing. As such participants will have data collected in a pre- and post-intervention phase, for a maximum of 13 time points. This approach has been identified by What Works Clearinghouse as an acceptable empirical design to include in evidence based practice reviews (Kratchowill et al., 2010).
Treatment:
Behavioral: befriending

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Joanna McHugh Power, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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