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Problem-solving-based Bibliotherapy Program for Family Caregivers (PSBBP)

Primary Purpose

Schizophrenia, Psychotic Disorders

Status
Completed
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
Hong Kong
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
Self-learning program
Psycho-education program (in Phase 2)
Sponsored by
Chinese University of Hong Kong
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional health services research trial for Schizophrenia focused on measuring psychosis, self-learning program, problem-solving, family caregivers, randomized controlled trial

Eligibility Criteria

18 Years - 60 Years (Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria of the participants include those who:

  • Hong Kong Chinese residents, aged 18-60;
  • taking care of and living with a family member primarily diagnosed with one psychotic disorder in the past 5 years (for Phase 1, patients with recent-onset [12 months] or first-episode psychosis will be recruited);
  • able to read and understand Cantonese/Mandarin; and
  • perceived a moderate to high burden of care (measured by Family Burden Interview Schedule (>20 out of 50 scores)

Exclusion criteria of family caregivers include:

  • those received or are receiving another family intervention;
  • those are having cognitive impairment or learning disability; and/or
  • those presented with a recent personal history of a serious mental illness or medical disease that may adversely affect their ability to participate in the intervention.

Sites / Locations

  • Li Ka Shing Specialty OPD
  • TM Psy Centre

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm 3

Arm Type

Experimental

Active Comparator

No Intervention

Arm Label

Self-learning program

Psycho-education (in Phase 2)

Routine community care

Arm Description

The participants in the Problem-solving Based Self-learning Program will complete the self-help and problem-solving manual developed by the research team for caregivers of people with psychotic disorders over 20 weeks. In addition to the orientation, understanding about psychosis and its care and final review sessions (4 sessions in 3 weeks) facilitated by the research nurse, the caregivers will work independently through the modules over 15-17 weeks.

Two trained advanced practice psychiatric nurses who are experienced in psychiatric rehabilitation and group programs will lead the psychoeducation group, which is guided by a validated treatment protocol based on the research team's and McFarlane and his colleagues' psychoeducation programs for psychosis. The program consists of 12 two-hour sessions held weekly/biweekly (similar to the self-learning program, completed in 5 months), with 4 main components, including 'introduction and goal setting'; 'an education workshop on mental illness, treatment and community services'; 'group exercises/rehearsals and discussion on symptom management, coping and self-care'; and ''review and future plan'.

Participants in the control group (and treatment groups) will receive routine psychiatric outpatient and family services.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Experience of caregiving (Chinese version of Experience of Caregiving Inventory)
The Chinese version of Experience of Caregiving Inventory is a 66-item self-reporting scale that measures experiences of caregiving to a family member with mental illness based on the transactional model of stress-appraisal-coping.
Social Problem-Solving (Chinese version of Revised (Short) Social Problem-Solving Inventory)
The Chinese version of Revised (Short) Social Problem-Solving Inventory will be used to assess participants' problem solving.
Mental state (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale)
Patients' mental state will be evaluated by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, a 30-item inventory assessing the absence/severity of psychotic symptoms across positive symptoms, negative symptoms and general psycho-pathology symptoms.
Patient functioning (43-item Specific Level of Functioning Scale)
The 43-item Specific Level of Functioning Scale will be used to assess 3 functional domains for patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders, including physical functioning/personal care (12 items), social functioning (14 items) and community living skills (17 items) on a 5-point Likert scale.
Perceived expressed emotion (Level of Expressed Emotion scale; used in Phase 2 only)
Perceived expressed emotion by patients will be measured by Level of Expressed Emotion scale.The scale comprises 4 domains: intrusiveness, attitude toward illness, tolerance/expectancy, and emotional responses; each consists of 15 items on a 4-point Likert scale ('1-Not true' to '4-True').
Rate and length of re-hospitalizations
The data of patients' frequency and lengths (days) of psychiatric hospitalizations over the intervention period, 6 months, 12 months or 24 months follow-ups, will be recorded by the research assistant by reviewing the electronic patient records.

Full Information

First Posted
March 12, 2015
Last Updated
September 10, 2020
Sponsor
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Collaborators
Castle Peak Hospital, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong, University of Victoria
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT02391649
Brief Title
Problem-solving-based Bibliotherapy Program for Family Caregivers
Acronym
PSBBP
Official Title
A Randomized Controlled Trial of Problem-solving Based Bibliotherapy Program for Family Caregivers of People With Psychotic Disorders
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
September 2020
Overall Recruitment Status
Completed
Study Start Date
March 1, 2014 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
August 31, 2019 (Actual)
Study Completion Date
August 30, 2020 (Actual)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Principal Investigator
Name of the Sponsor
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Collaborators
Castle Peak Hospital, Prince of Wales Hospital, Shatin, Hong Kong, University of Victoria

4. Oversight

Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
This proposed randomized controlled trial will test the effectiveness of a problem-solving based bibliotherapy program (PSBBP) for Chinese family caregivers in psychotic disorders (not more than 5 years onset). A repeated-measures, three-group design will be used to evaluate and compare the effects between two treatment groups(PSBBP and psycho-education group) and routine outpatient service and family support (control group) for 198 randomly selected family caregivers of outpatients with psychotic disorders over a 24-month follow-up. Before the 3-arm trial to be conducted, a pilot parallel-group randomised controlled trial with a similar study design to the later three-arm randomised controlled trial (Phase 2) will be conducted at one psychiatric outpatient clinic in Hong Kong. Receiving an additional funding from local government, another pilot two-arm trial will also be conducted for family caregivers of people with first-episode psychosis in the community to support and inform the 3-arm randomised controlled trial.
Detailed Description
Family caregivers of people with psychotic disorders are confronted by a various physical, psychosocial and financial hardships. This can adversely affect family members' caregiving experiences, psychological distress, general well-being, and family relationships or emotional involvement, which in turn may contribute to a greater risk of patient relapse and non-recovery. While family psycho-education and mutual support groups are effective in reducing caregivers' burden of care, these approaches usually require regular meetings and encounter difficulties in extensive training of group leaders/facilitators and engaging participants to actively share their caregiving experiences due to time inconvenience and fear/inability of expression of feelings. By virtue of the above, an alternate model of self-help program in book form named bibliotherapy, which is a guided reading and self-practice program with problem-solving training facilitated by a psychiatric nurse, has recently demonstrated evidences in clinical trials for families of depressive and psychotic patients by the research team, and other researchers. In phase 1, a pilot randomised controlled trial with repeated measures, parallel-group (2-arm) design will be carried out at one psychiatric clinic. This pilot trial aims to evaluate the effects between the treatment group (i.e., a problem-solving based self-learning program) and routine outpatient service (control group) for 116 randomly selected family caregivers of outpatients with recent-onset psychosis over a 6-month follow-up. The study outcomes include the caregivers' burden of care, caregiving experiences, and problem-solving abilities, and the patients' mental state, functioning, and re-hospitalization rates. They will be measured at recruitment, one week, and 6 months following the interventions. Another pilot controlled trial will recruit 116 families of people with first-episode psychosis attending follow-up at two regional psychiatric outpatient clinics in Hong Kong. Participant will be randomly selected in equal proportion from the two clinics under study and after baseline measures, the participants will be randomised to the treatment (i.e., the Chinese version of the original manual of bibliotherapy program) or the routine care. They will also be measured with the similar outcomes at the above pilot study at recruitment, one week, 6 months, and 12 months post-intervention. In phase 2, a 3-arm randomized controlled trial will be conducted to test the effectiveness of the problem-solving based bibliotherapy program (PSBBP) for Chinese family caregivers in early stage of psychotic disorders. A repeated-measures, three-group design will be used to evaluate and compare the effects between two treatment groups (PSBBP and psycho-education group) and routine outpatient service and family support (control group) for 198 randomly selected family caregivers of outpatients with psychotic disorders over a 24-month follow-up. Primary outcomes include caregivers' burden of care, caregiving experiences and coping and social problem-solving skills using validated instruments. Secondary outcomes are patients' mental state, functioning, perceived expressed emotion, and re-hospitalization rate. They will be measured at recruitment, one week, and 12 and 24 months following the interventions. It is hypothesized that the PSBBP participants will produce significantly better improvements in caregivers' perceived burden, caregiving experience and coping and problem-solving skills than those in psycho-education and control groups over 24-month follow-up. Focus group interviews will be conducted after the first post-test with 20 caregivers (10 participants per group) in both treatment groups. Their data will be content analyzed to identify their perceived benefits, limitations and difficulties encountered and therapeutic ingredients of the two programs.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Schizophrenia, Psychotic Disorders
Keywords
psychosis, self-learning program, problem-solving, family caregivers, randomized controlled trial

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Health Services Research
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Parallel Assignment
Model Description
Repeated-measures, three-arm design (and in phase 1, two pilot 2-arm controlled trials with repeated-measures design; sample size 112 for the two pilot studies)
Masking
Outcomes Assessor
Masking Description
Outcome assessors are blind to the group assignment and intervention undertaken and concealed to the participant list.
Allocation
Randomized
Enrollment
422 (Actual)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Self-learning program
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
The participants in the Problem-solving Based Self-learning Program will complete the self-help and problem-solving manual developed by the research team for caregivers of people with psychotic disorders over 20 weeks. In addition to the orientation, understanding about psychosis and its care and final review sessions (4 sessions in 3 weeks) facilitated by the research nurse, the caregivers will work independently through the modules over 15-17 weeks.
Arm Title
Psycho-education (in Phase 2)
Arm Type
Active Comparator
Arm Description
Two trained advanced practice psychiatric nurses who are experienced in psychiatric rehabilitation and group programs will lead the psychoeducation group, which is guided by a validated treatment protocol based on the research team's and McFarlane and his colleagues' psychoeducation programs for psychosis. The program consists of 12 two-hour sessions held weekly/biweekly (similar to the self-learning program, completed in 5 months), with 4 main components, including 'introduction and goal setting'; 'an education workshop on mental illness, treatment and community services'; 'group exercises/rehearsals and discussion on symptom management, coping and self-care'; and ''review and future plan'.
Arm Title
Routine community care
Arm Type
No Intervention
Arm Description
Participants in the control group (and treatment groups) will receive routine psychiatric outpatient and family services.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Self-learning program
Intervention Description
The PSBBP in this study consists of 5 modules (Module 1: Caregiver's well-being; Module 2:Getting the best out of support services; Module 3:Well-being of the person with schizophrenia; Module 4:Dealing with the [psychosocial] effects of the illness; and Module 5:Dealing with [physical and mental health] effects of the illness), helping each caregiver from developing a positive attitude to caregiving, identifying caring related problems and obstacles, predicting positive and negative implications of each alternative, to trying out the solution and monitor if it worked.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Psycho-education program (in Phase 2)
Intervention Description
The program consists of 12 two-hour sessions held weekly/biweekly completed in 5 months, with 4 main components, including 'introduction and goal setting'; 'an education workshop on mental illness, treatment and community services'; 'group exercises/rehearsals and discussion on symptom management, coping and self-care'; and 'review and future plan'.
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Description
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Time Frame
6 months (for Phases 1 and 2) after completion of intervention
Title
Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Description
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Time Frame
12 months (for Phases 1 and 2) after completion of intervention
Title
Perceived burden of care (Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule)
Description
Caregivers' perceived burden of care will be measured by a Chinese version of the 25-item Family Burden Interview Schedule.
Time Frame
24 months (for Phase 2 only) after completion of intervention
Title
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
Description
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.
Time Frame
6 months (for Phases 1 and 2) after completion of intervention
Title
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
Description
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.
Time Frame
12 months (for Phases 1 and 2) after completion of intervention
Title
Coping style (42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist)
Description
A Chinese version of Coping style of the caregivers style will be assessed using the 42-item Revised Ways of Coping Checklist.
Time Frame
24 months (for Phase 2 only) after completion of intervention
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Experience of caregiving (Chinese version of Experience of Caregiving Inventory)
Description
The Chinese version of Experience of Caregiving Inventory is a 66-item self-reporting scale that measures experiences of caregiving to a family member with mental illness based on the transactional model of stress-appraisal-coping.
Time Frame
24 months (Phase 2; 6 and 12 months for Phase 1) after completion of intervention
Title
Social Problem-Solving (Chinese version of Revised (Short) Social Problem-Solving Inventory)
Description
The Chinese version of Revised (Short) Social Problem-Solving Inventory will be used to assess participants' problem solving.
Time Frame
24 months (Phase 2; 6 and 12 months for Phase 1) after completion of intervention
Title
Mental state (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale)
Description
Patients' mental state will be evaluated by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale, a 30-item inventory assessing the absence/severity of psychotic symptoms across positive symptoms, negative symptoms and general psycho-pathology symptoms.
Time Frame
24 months (Phase 2; 6 and 12 months for Phase 1) after completion of intervention
Title
Patient functioning (43-item Specific Level of Functioning Scale)
Description
The 43-item Specific Level of Functioning Scale will be used to assess 3 functional domains for patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders, including physical functioning/personal care (12 items), social functioning (14 items) and community living skills (17 items) on a 5-point Likert scale.
Time Frame
24 months (Phase 2; 6 and 12 months for Phase 1) after completion of intervention
Title
Perceived expressed emotion (Level of Expressed Emotion scale; used in Phase 2 only)
Description
Perceived expressed emotion by patients will be measured by Level of Expressed Emotion scale.The scale comprises 4 domains: intrusiveness, attitude toward illness, tolerance/expectancy, and emotional responses; each consists of 15 items on a 4-point Likert scale ('1-Not true' to '4-True').
Time Frame
24 months after completion of intervention
Title
Rate and length of re-hospitalizations
Description
The data of patients' frequency and lengths (days) of psychiatric hospitalizations over the intervention period, 6 months, 12 months or 24 months follow-ups, will be recorded by the research assistant by reviewing the electronic patient records.
Time Frame
24 months (Phase 1; 6 and 12 months for Phase 1) after completion of intervention

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
18 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
60 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria of the participants include those who: Hong Kong Chinese residents, aged 18-60; taking care of and living with a family member primarily diagnosed with one psychotic disorder in the past 5 years (for Phase 1, patients with recent-onset [12 months] or first-episode psychosis will be recruited); able to read and understand Cantonese/Mandarin; and perceived a moderate to high burden of care (measured by Family Burden Interview Schedule (>20 out of 50 scores) Exclusion criteria of family caregivers include: those received or are receiving another family intervention; those are having cognitive impairment or learning disability; and/or those presented with a recent personal history of a serious mental illness or medical disease that may adversely affect their ability to participate in the intervention.
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Wai Tong CHIEN
Organizational Affiliation
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
Facility Information:
Facility Name
Li Ka Shing Specialty OPD
City
Sha Tin
State/Province
NT
Country
Hong Kong
Facility Name
TM Psy Centre
City
Tuen Mun
State/Province
NT
Country
Hong Kong

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No
Citations:
PubMed Identifier
18800379
Citation
Chien WT, Chan SW. Testing the psychometric properties of a Chinese version of the Level of Expressed Emotion scale. Res Nurs Health. 2009 Feb;32(1):59-70. doi: 10.1002/nur.20303.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
23172001
Citation
McCann TV, Lubman DI, Cotton SM, Murphy B, Crisp K, Catania L, Marck C, Gleeson JF. A randomized controlled trial of bibliotherapy for carers of young people with first-episode psychosis. Schizophr Bull. 2013 Nov;39(6):1307-17. doi: 10.1093/schbul/sbs121. Epub 2012 Nov 20.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
20194413
Citation
Chien WT, Lee IY. The schizophrenia care management program for family caregivers of Chinese patients with schizophrenia. Psychiatr Serv. 2010 Mar;61(3):317-20. doi: 10.1176/ps.2010.61.3.317.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
24109184
Citation
Chien WT, Leung SF, Yeung FK, Wong WK. Current approaches to treatments for schizophrenia spectrum disorders, part II: psychosocial interventions and patient-focused perspectives in psychiatric care. Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2013;9:1463-81. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S49263. Epub 2013 Sep 25.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
21226941
Citation
Breitborde NJ, Moreno FA, Mai-Dixon N, Peterson R, Durst L, Bernstein B, Byreddy S, McFarlane WR. Multifamily group psychoeducation and cognitive remediation for first-episode psychosis: a randomized controlled trial. BMC Psychiatry. 2011 Jan 12;11:9. doi: 10.1186/1471-244X-11-9.
Results Reference
background
PubMed Identifier
27222459
Citation
Chien WT, Yip AL, Liu JY, McMaster TW. The effectiveness of manual-guided, problem-solving-based self-learning programme for family caregivers of people with recent-onset psychosis: A randomised controlled trial with 6-month follow-up. Int J Nurs Stud. 2016 Jul;59:141-55. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2016.03.018. Epub 2016 Apr 6. Erratum In: Int J Nurs Stud. 2021 Jan;113:103794.
Results Reference
result

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Problem-solving-based Bibliotherapy Program for Family Caregivers

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