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Video-Based Coping Skills Training for Caregivers

W

Williams LifeSkills

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Caregivers

Treatments

Behavioral: Video-based coping skills training with telephone coaching

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Industry
NIH

Identifiers

NCT00396825
2R44AG025593 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
2R44AG025593-04A ;

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this Phase II SBIR study is a) to complete the adaptation begun in Phase I of the ten skill modules of the Williams LifeSkills Video (WLV) for use by persons who are caregivers for a relative with Alzheimer's Disease (AD) or other dementia, b) to script and produce the complete Caregiver LifeSkills Video (CLV) and c) to conduct a randomized clinical trial of the completed CLV to document benefits in terms of reduced psychosocial distress, reduced biomarkers of stress and improved well being.

Full description

An extensive body of research documents adverse effects of being a caregiver for a relative with AD on a broad range of psychosocial and biological indicators of stress, including increased hassles and depression (Russo & Vitaliano, Experimental Aging Research 1995; 21:273-294 ) and the metabolic syndrome (Vitaliano et al, Journal of Gerontology: Psychological Sciences 1996; 51:290-299). Interventions to reduce psychological distress in caregivers have not produced clinically meaningful results thus far (Shulz et al. Gerontologist 2002; 42:589-602) and no intervention trials have included assessment of biomarkers of stress. Logistic obstacles make it hard for caregivers to participate in treatments that require them to come to a treatment site outside the home; thus, interventions with caregivers are hard to deliver. The Williams LifeSkills Video (WLV) is based on the LifeSkills Workshop, which has been shown in randomized clinical trials to reduce hostility and blood pressure in post-MI patients (Gidron et al. Health Psychology 1999; 18:416-420) and to reduce a broad range of psychosocial risk factors as well as blood pressure and heart rate during both rest and stress conditions in post-CABG patients (Bishop et al., American Heart Journal 2005;150:602-609). The WLV was developed with support from an NIMH SBIR Phase II grant and presents 10 skill modules -- 1) increased awareness of thoughts and feelings arising in stressful situations; 2) evaluation of those thoughts and feelings to decide whether to try to change them or to take action to try to change the situation; 3) deflection skills to change one's thoughts and feelings; action skills to change stressful situations, including 4) assertion, 5) problem-solving, and 6) saying no; and relationship skills - 7) speaking clearly, 8) listening, 9) empathy, and 10) increasing the positives - using dramatizations of scenarios in which the skill is first not used and then used to produce a better outcome. A randomized clinical trial evaluating it in stressed community volunteers showed that it is superior to a wait list control condition in reducing psychosocial (anxiety, depression and perceived stress; (Kirby et al.Psychosomatic Medicine,2006;68:816-823.

In the research conducted in Phase I of this SBIR-supported study, we adapted the scenarios used for the 10 skills to represent more closely the real life situations faced by caregivers and we developed a telephone coaching manual. Now in Phase II of this study, we will produce the complete Caregiver LifeSkills Video (CLV) evaluate its effects on measures of psychosocial distress and biomarkers of stress in a randomized clinical trial with 120 caregivers of a relative with AD or other major dementias. If successful in reducing the psychosocial and biological markers of stress that are elevated in caregivers, this new WLS product, the CLV, could have a major impact in reducing the health damaging effects of stress among the millions of Americans who are caregivers for relatives with AD and other dementias.

Enrollment

116 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Must be a primary caregiver for a relative with Alzheimer's Disease or other dementia

Exclusion criteria

  • Presence of a major medical or psychiatric illness that would prevent completion of low risk study procedures

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Factorial Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

116 participants in 2 patient groups

Active treatment
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects randomized to this arm will receive the Family Caregiver Kit composed of the Williams LifeSkills Family Caregiver Video and Workbook and will also receive telephone coaching
Treatment:
Behavioral: Video-based coping skills training with telephone coaching
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Subjects randomized to this arm will receive no intervention and serve as wait list controls. They will undergo the same evaluations as the Intervention arm subjects at comparable times. In a crossover design, once subjects have finished serving as controls, they will be given the video, workbook, and telephone calls from a social worker and tested one more time.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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