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Mindfulness-based Illness Management Program for Schizophrenia (MBPP)

T

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Schizophrenia

Treatments

Other: Routine Care
Behavioral: Mindfulness-based program
Behavioral: Psychoeducation group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01667601
HSEARS20121211001

Details and patient eligibility

About

Only a few intervention studies have also focused on changing patients' negative thoughts and feelings towards the illness and their relationship to the suffering caused by those thoughts, which is evidenced to empower psychosocial functioning and control of distressing thoughts in severe depression and psychotic disorders by using the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction program. This controlled trial is designed to test the effects of a mindfulness-based Illness management program (MBPP) for Chinese patients with schizophrenia on their symptom severity, illness insight and psychosocial functioning.

Full description

Objectives: This study is to test the effectiveness of a mindfulness-based illness management program for Chinese outpatients with schizophrenia over a 24-month follow-up. The program is an integrated, insight-inducing educational program that addresses patients' awareness and knowledge of schizophrenia and skills of illness management.

Methods: A two-phase, single-blind, multi-site randomized controlled trial will be conducted with 449 Chinese patients with schizophrenia in Hong Kong, China and Taiwan. In the first phase, 107 participants will be randomly selected from the eligible patient lists of three outpatient clinics in Hong Kong only (i.e., 38 subjects from each clinic), and after baseline measurement, be assigned to either the mindfulness-based illness management program, conventional psycho-education group, or usual psychiatric care. For the second phase, the participants will be randomly selected from the eligible patient list in three study venues or countries (i.e., 114 subjects from each study site/ country) and after baseline measurement, be assigned similar to the first phase to one of the three study groups. The patients' mental and psychosocial functioning, insights into illness, and their re-hospitalization rates will be measured at recruitment and at one week, and 6, 12 and 24 months after completing the interventions.

Hypothesis: The patients in the mindfulness-based psycho-education program will report significantly greater improvements in their symptoms and re-hospitalization rates (primary outcomes) and other secondary outcomes (e.g., insight into illness and functioning) over the 24-month follow-up, when compared with those in psycho-education group or usual care.

Conclusions: The findings will provide evidence whether the mindfulness-based psycho-education program can better improve Chinese schizophrenia sufferers' psychosocial functioning and reduce their illness relapse.

Enrollment

449 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 64 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • outpatients;
  • aged 18+; and
  • diagnosed as schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders (< or =5 years) according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 4th edition, as ascertained by the Structured Clinical Interview (SCID-I).

Exclusion criteria

  • not able to understand the psycho-education content and Chinese;
  • mentally unstable at recruitment; and
  • with co-morbidity of other severe mental health problems such as depression and substance misuse.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

449 participants in 3 patient groups

Mindfulness-based program
Experimental group
Description:
A structured, researcher-designed mindfulness-based psycho-education program (6 months), comprised of 12 bi-weekly, 2-hour group sessions (10-12 patients per group). The program was based on the psycho-education programs by Chien et al. (2010) and Lehman et al. (2004), as well as the 8-session Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction Program by Kabat-Zinn (1990).
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness-based program
Routine Care
Other group
Description:
Routine psychiatric outpatient care, including medication, psychiatric consultation in outpatient clinic, brief education by psychiatric nurses, financial and social welfare advices by social workers, and individual counseling by clinical psychologist.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Psychoeducation group
Behavioral: Mindfulness-based program
Other: Routine Care
Psychoeducation group
Active Comparator group
Description:
A psychoeducation group program (12 sessions, bi-weekly) based on Dr. Macpherson's Family Psychoeducation Program in 1996 and Chien and Bressington's one in 2014/15 will be used. References: Chien WT, Bressington D. A randomized controlled trial of a nurse-led structured psychosocial intervention program for people with first-onset mental illness in psychiatric outpatient clinics. Psychiatry Res 2015;229:277-86. Macpherson R, Jerrom B, Hughes AA. controlled study of education about drug treatment in schizophrenia. Br J Psychiatry 1996;168:709-17.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Psychoeducation group

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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