The SPIN - Scleroderma Support Group Leader EDucation Program Trial (SPIN-SSLED)
NCT ID: NCT03965780
Last Updated: 2021-08-31
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
148 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-09-23
2021-07-13
Brief Summary
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However, many people with scleroderma do not have access to scleroderma support groups, and many support groups that are initiated are not sustained due to a number of obstacles. Leaders of these support groups play a particularly important role. They are responsible for a wide range of tasks including administrative details that go into planning meetings, facilitating effective and meaningful discussions, managing any issues that may arise in group dynamics, balancing their own needs with the needs of the group and many more.
The Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network (SPIN) team has worked with patient organizations and an advisory team of scleroderma support group leaders to develop the Support group Leader EDucation (SPIN-SSLED) Program for scleroderma support group leaders with the goals of (1) providing information and resources to leaders to help them feel more comfortable, confident and supported in their roles and (2) to provide people with the skills they need to establish scleroderma support groups where none exist.
The SPIN-SSLED Trial will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of the SPIN-SSLED Program on scleroderma support group leaders' self-efficacy (primary outcome) in carrying out their leader tasks (which is defined as their perceived ability to carry out actions needed to be successful in support group leadership), burnout and emotional well-being.
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Detailed Description
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Support groups provide important benefits to people with burdensome medical conditions, based on the principle that people who face similar challenges can empower one another through emotional and practical support. Support groups may be held face-to-face or online, led by professionals or peers, and have a structured or an unstructured format. Activities typically involve an educational or information-sharing component and the exchange of emotional and practical support.
Systemic sclerosis (SSc), or scleroderma, is a rare, chronic, autoimmune connective tissue disease characterized by abnormal fibrotic processes and excessive collagen production. Peer-led support groups play an important role for many people with SSc. Currently, there are approximately over 250 leaders and co-leaders affiliated with SPIN-SSLED's partners Scleroderma Canada and Canadian provincial organizations, including Sclérodermie Québec, the Scleroderma Foundation (United States), Scleroderma \& Raynaud's UK (United Kingdom), Scleroderma Australia and Australian state organizations, and Scleroderma New Zealand, almost all led by people with SSc. Many people with SSc, however, cannot access support groups, and many initiated support groups are not sustained due to challenges that could be addressed via leader training. SPIN partner organizations are committed to improving support group quality and access by providing training to existing support group leaders and to new leaders to start groups in underserved areas and via the Internet.
The SPIN-SSLED Program was developed by a team of researchers with expertise in SSc, patient organization representatives, and a Patient Advisory Board comprised of current SSc support group leaders. The program content and design are based on results of SPIN's preliminary research on support groups in SSc and informed by instructional material for support group leaders SPIN identified via the internet and by consultations with support group leaders. The program uses a problem-based learning approach. Problem-based learning is a learner-centered approach that integrates theory and practice by providing the necessary knowledge and skills, presenting a complex, real-world problem, then working to identify an approach to solving the problem. To implement this, each module, or learning session, will introduce a topic and provide an overview of key information. Then, there will be a guided discussion among training group participants about possible approaches and solutions. The program includes 13 modules that will be delivered live via webinar over the course of the 3-month program. In addition to the live modules, SPIN-SSLED participants will receive a workbook that summarizes didactic material that is provided and will be shown filmed vignettes demonstrating effective group facilitation techniques and ways to respond to support group issues. SPIN-SSLED participants will also have access to an online resource center that includes a range of helpful tools for leaders including files of SSc related videos to show at meetings and an online forum for leaders to post questions, open only to leaders enrolled in the training program.
The aim of the SPIN-SSLED Trial is to assess the effectiveness of the SPIN-SSLED Program on scleroderma support group leaders' self-efficacy (primary outcome), which SPIN defined as their perceived ability to carry out actions needed to be successful in support group leadership, burnout and emotional well-being. Additionally, participants will be asked about their satisfaction with the program.
SPIN's partners from the Scleroderma Canada, including Sclérodermie Québec, Scleroderma Foundation, Scleroderma \& Raynaud's UK, Scleroderma Association of New South Wales and Scleroderma New Zealand will contact group leaders to describe the SPIN-SSLED Full-Scale Trial and ascertain interest in participating. They will also provide SPIN-SSLED personnel with a list of their support group leaders. SPIN-SSLED personnel will then send email invitations with the consent form to all support group leaders on these lists. Following this, support group leaders will be contacted by phone within 24 hours to describe the study, review the consent form, and answer questions any question they may have. SPIN will enroll 180 SSc support group leaders to participate in the trial. 90 participants will be randomized to the waitlist control group and 90 to the training group. Three groups will run simultaneously per 3-month period for a total of 15 months.
Based on SPIN's previous experience with videoconferencing and consistent with previous trials of videoconference training, to maximize effective interaction and participation, 6 group leaders will be assigned to each training group. Training sessions will be delivered using the GoToMeeting® videoconferencing platform, a high-performance platform that has been used successfully for similar applications.
A survey will be administered to all participants before the trial. Participants randomized to either the training group or waitlist control group will also be administered a baseline, post-intervention and 3-months post-intervention surveys for outcome measures. The first survey will contain a demographics questionnaire designed for this study that includes basic demographic information, such as gender, age and employment status and disease-related variables, such as years since scleroderma diagnosis as well as their general availabilities to attend the 60-90 minute sessions. All questionnaires will be completed using the online surveying tool Qualtrics. Once the online survey data is collected, data will be exported to the statistics software program, International Business Machines Corporation Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (IBM SPSS).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
NONE
Study Groups
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Training group
Participants in the training group will receive a 13-week training program delivered via videoconference. The program includes 13 modules delivered via videoconference over the course of the 3-month program in weekly 60- to 90-minute sessions. Participants will receive a training manual, be shown filmed vignettes, and will have access to a chatroom and an online resource centre.
SPIN-SSLED Program
The SPIN-SSLED Program is a 3-month-long (13 sessions) group training program designed to be delivered via videoconferencing to provide information and skills to improve leader support group leaders' confidence and self-efficacy to carry out their leadership roles and reduce the burden on them of leading a support group. Each session is about 90 minutes long and covers one of the 13 modules of the program.
Module topics includes: (1) The Leader's Role; (2) Starting a Support Group; (3) Structuring a Support Group Meeting; (4) Scleroderma 101; (5) Successful Support Group Culture; (6) Managing Support Group Dynamics; (7) Loss and Grief: The support group leader; (8) Loss and Grief in Scleroderma: Supporting group members; (9) Advertising and Recruitment for the Support Group; (10) The Continuity of the Group; (11) Supporting Yourself as a Leader; (12) Remote Support Groups; and (13) Transitions in Support Groups.
Wait-list control group
Participants in the wait-list control group will not receive the training program and will have no access to the resources indicated above.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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SPIN-SSLED Program
The SPIN-SSLED Program is a 3-month-long (13 sessions) group training program designed to be delivered via videoconferencing to provide information and skills to improve leader support group leaders' confidence and self-efficacy to carry out their leadership roles and reduce the burden on them of leading a support group. Each session is about 90 minutes long and covers one of the 13 modules of the program.
Module topics includes: (1) The Leader's Role; (2) Starting a Support Group; (3) Structuring a Support Group Meeting; (4) Scleroderma 101; (5) Successful Support Group Culture; (6) Managing Support Group Dynamics; (7) Loss and Grief: The support group leader; (8) Loss and Grief in Scleroderma: Supporting group members; (9) Advertising and Recruitment for the Support Group; (10) The Continuity of the Group; (11) Supporting Yourself as a Leader; (12) Remote Support Groups; and (13) Transitions in Support Groups.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Be available to participate at times when sessions are scheduled
* Be able to use the internet to access the training program
* Be English or French-speaking
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Lady Davis Institute
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Brett D Thombs
Professor, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University; Senior Investigator, Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Jewish General Hospital
Principal Investigators
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Brett D Thombs, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, McGill University
Locations
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Jewish General Hospital
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Countries
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References
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Thombs BD, Aguila K, Dyas L, Carrier ME, Fedoruk C, Horwood L, Canedo-Ayala M, Sauve M, Kwakkenbos L, Malcarne VL, El-Baalbaki G, Pelaez S, Connolly K, Hudson M, Platt RW; SPIN-SSLED Support Group Advisory Team. Protocol for a partially nested randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effectiveness of the Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network Support Group Leader EDucation (SPIN-SSLED) Program. Trials. 2019 Dec 12;20(1):717. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3747-z.
Thombs BD, Levis B, Carrier ME, Dyas L, Konrad V, Sauve M, Benedetti A; SPIN-SSLED Support Group Advisory Team. Association of support group leader experience with Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network Support group Leader EDucation Program outcomes: Secondary analysis of a two-arm parallel partially nested randomized controlled trial. J Scleroderma Relat Disord. 2024 Sep 4:23971983241272742. doi: 10.1177/23971983241272742. Online ahead of print.
Thombs BD, Levis B, Carrier ME, Dyas L, Nordlund J, Tao L, Aguila K, Bourgeault A, Konrad V, Sauve M, Connolly K, Henry RS, Ostbo N, Levis AW, Kwakkenbos L, Malcarne VL, El-Baalbaki G, Hudson M, Wurz A, Culos-Reed SN, Platt RW, Benedetti A; SPIN-SSLED Support Group Leader Advisory Team. Effects of a support group leader education program jointly developed by health professionals and patients on peer leader self-efficacy among leaders of scleroderma support groups: a two-arm parallel partially nested randomised controlled trial. Orphanet J Rare Dis. 2022 Oct 28;17(1):396. doi: 10.1186/s13023-022-02552-x.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Other Identifiers
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17-112A
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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