Feasibility Trial of an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Intervention for Individuals Experiencing Homelessness
NCT ID: NCT04243018
Last Updated: 2020-04-02
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
80 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-05-15
2020-01-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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In addition, individuals who have experienced homelessness can have their growth and development curtailed by applying a punitive, shame based, and defeatist perspectives to their own goals and values in life. Direct acts or discrimination, as well as diminished opportunities offered to people experiencing homelessness, can be understood as a manifestation of public stigma. Labelling someone as "homeless" or an "addict" tends to activate common stereotypes such as thinking that the person is likely to be unreliable, deceitful, or weak, among other stereotypes. This often leads to some sort of social sanction or devaluation, reducing the probability of the person being hired, or being trusted as a parent, friend, or lover.
People who identify with a stigmatised group often internalise the stereotypes associated with that group. In addition, the effects of enacted stigma, the emotional and cognitive barriers erected by the individual experiencing homelessness in response to perceived or experienced stigma, can also serve to obstruct access to opportunities. The person may self-identify as a loser, being damaged goods, or always hurting others. Attachment to these self-conceptions entails giving up on important and valued life directions. These are manifestations of self-stigma. Studies of individuals with serious mental illness and co-occurring disorders have shown that self-stigma is associated with delays in treatment seeking or avoidance of treatment, diminished self-esteem/self-efficacy, increased mental health symptoms, and lower quality of life. Therefore, it is imperative that interventions actively address and aim to mitigate the deleterious effects of shame and self-stigma.
Assertive Community Treatment and case-management interventions have been proven moderately effective in improving mental and physical health outcomes for homeless populations, however, the resources and expertise required to run such interventions are; unavailable to most sectors and communities, time consuming and normally used on an individual case basis, leaving large portions of this population untreated. Research into brief psychological interventions with the homeless population has revealed promising effects, however, these interventions often target specific sub-populations, chose to focus on one aspect of recovery such as substance abuse and do not address comorbidity of illness.
The Acceptance and Commitment Therapy(ACT) model is compatible with conceptualisations of recovery from severe mental illness (defined as "living a satisfying, hopeful and contributing life even with limitations caused by the illness"; and "having a sense of purpose and direction"). From an ACT perspective 'addictive-', 'depressive-', 'anxiety'- and "stress-' behaviours might share the same function; and those with high levels of comorbidity, such as the homeless population might therefore be treated using an ACT.
The focus on specific cognitive behavioural processes of mindfulness, acceptance, distancing, and values-based action makes ACT interventions typically brief and have been proven to be effective after a single session and mediation studies suggest that the positive clinical effects of ACT are achieved by changing these targeted psychological processes.
A two-arm feasibility pilot randomised control trial will be conducted to investigate differences in the proposed outcome variables between participants assigned to a group-based ACT intervention and those assigned to peer support group. A process level investigation will also be used to investigate the feasibility of conducting a full scale RCT with the population.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Intervention to improve well-being and reduce the negative effects of shame and self-stigma in a population of adults experiencing homelessness.This will involve participating in two sessions, lasting two and a half hours each, over a period of two weeks. Well-being will be promoted in each session by targeting core processes of the ACT model including acceptance, cognitive defusion, mindfulness, flexible perspective taking, values clarification and committed action. In addition participants will be provided with an acceptance and commitment training workbook. The workbook will foster core processes of the ACT model through psycho-education, daily exercises, tips and tools.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Group Treatment
The intervention presents, a mixture of instruction, discussion, and the use of metaphor and experiential activities designed to sensitise participants to the effects of self-stigma and shame on how they live their lives. This training condition provides instruction and experiences that train participants to notice, and then to override, the very human tendency to categorise and then avoid aversive thoughts and feelings and the people and situations that evoke them. The acceptance and commitment training condition will cover the following topics: (a) introduction to enacted and self-stigma (b) cognitive defusion/behavioural flexibility (c) acceptance vs. avoidance and control of emotions and thoughts and (d) values and committed action.
Peer Support Group
This peer support group will involve discussing themes around experiencing homelessness, shame and stigma and will be facilitated by an experienced peer support group leader.This will involve participating in two sessions, lasting two hours each, over a period of two weeks.
Peer Support Group
The peer support group will allow participants to share and discuss experiences related to their experiences of homelessness, shame and stigma. The group will be facilitated by an expert in facilitating peer support groups with marginalised populations.
Interventions
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Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Group Treatment
The intervention presents, a mixture of instruction, discussion, and the use of metaphor and experiential activities designed to sensitise participants to the effects of self-stigma and shame on how they live their lives. This training condition provides instruction and experiences that train participants to notice, and then to override, the very human tendency to categorise and then avoid aversive thoughts and feelings and the people and situations that evoke them. The acceptance and commitment training condition will cover the following topics: (a) introduction to enacted and self-stigma (b) cognitive defusion/behavioural flexibility (c) acceptance vs. avoidance and control of emotions and thoughts and (d) values and committed action.
Peer Support Group
The peer support group will allow participants to share and discuss experiences related to their experiences of homelessness, shame and stigma. The group will be facilitated by an expert in facilitating peer support groups with marginalised populations.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Over 18 and under 65.
\- Service Providers: Have been working with homeless services for over a year, in close contact with service users. Over 18 and under 65.
Exclusion Criteria
* Participants with serious cognitive impairments
* Participants with below conversational level proficiency in English
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University College Dublin
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Louise McHugh, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University College Dublin
Locations
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Merchants Quay Ireland
Dublin, , Ireland
Focus Ireland
Dublin, , Ireland
Peter McVerry Trust
Dublin, , Ireland
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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HS19-13Murthy-McHugh
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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