The Efficacy of the iWork.COMP Among Health Care Professionals
NCT ID: NCT07018089
Last Updated: 2025-06-27
Study Results
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Basic Information
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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
200 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2026-06-01
2028-05-30
Brief Summary
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To fulfil this gap, this clinical trial intends to develop and preliminarily test the efficacy of a short-term and low-time consuming internet delivery CFT-based intervention (iWork.COMP) specifically designed to mitigate the impact of toxic leadership styles through the development of compassionate motivation among health care professionals. Following a Randomized Controlled Trial, with 200 participants allocated to either a treatment group (TG) or a waiting-list control group (WLCG), it is hypothesized that the iWork.COMP will reduce the impact of toxic leadership styles, deviant traits and burnout symptoms among the TG when compared with the WLCG. Moreover, we expect that the iWork.COMP will promote wellbeing and a compassionate motivation among the TG when compared with the WLCG.
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Detailed Description
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Within psychotherapeutic interventions, there has been a growing empirical support for compassion-based interventions (e.g., Compassion-Focused Therapy; CFT), in a wide range of contexts. Recent studies have shown that CFT is considered an effective therapeutic approach for the rehabilitation of individuals with several psychopathological symptoms/disorders (e.g., anxiety, stress, burnout, and deviant personality traits) and for the establishment of healthy relationships with friends, family, and coworkers. In the workplace, CFT-based interventions have been shown to promote employees' wellbeing, through the reduction of stress and burnout symptoms and improvement of healthy and compassionate interpersonal relationships. Compassion can be conceptualized as a motivation to be sensitive to the suffering of one-self and others, allied with the wisdom and commitment to prevent and/or relieve it. It is linked with psychological well-being and has been found to be negatively associated with emotion dysregulation, shame and self-criticism. In the workplace, compassion has been linked with work commitment and work satisfaction. Moreover, compassion at work has been negatively associated with burnout symptoms. It is thus mandatory to develop and test cost-effectiveness CFT-based intervention programs able to mitigate the impact of toxic leadership styles in the workforce, promoting compassionate workplaces in health care systems. These mitigation programs can impact on an individual, team, and organizational levels. Promoting a compassionate motivation among health care professionals is crucial to their mental and physical health, to their wellbeing at work, and, consequently, to the delivery of safe, high-quality, and patient-centered care to the population.
2. Study Design This study will follow a Randomized Controlled Trial design (RCT; CONSORT-Statement) involving health care units from the Health Local Unity of Coimbra (HLU Coimbra; selected by the hospital's administration). The selected health care units will be randomly assigned to the Treatment Group (TG) and to the Waiting List Control Group WLCG). The randomization at the health care unit level (and not at an individual level) intends to maximize the intervention effects, as all participants will be receiving the intervention at the same time, potentially boosting and cumulating individual and team intervention effects.
Individuals who agree to participate in this RCT will sign an informed consent and will be asked to fulfil their socioeconomic data and a set of questionnaires (baseline assessment, M0). Participants will be assessed in three more assessment points (4-weeks intervals): middle of the intervention (M1), post treatment (M2) and 4-week follow-up (M3). All assessments (M0 to M3) will approximately take 10 minutes.
3. Participants Participants will be 200 emerging/pre-service (Gen-Z) and current health care workers (i.e., doctors and nurses working in the surgical pathway), aged over 18 years old and assuming both leader and non-leader roles in two (or more) similar Portuguese health care units. As the iWork.COMP program aims to be applied to all the workforce, no more restrictions are planned on age as well as on gender distribution.
Regarding the sample size, a power analysis was conducted a priori (GPower v3.1 software), specifying for F tests (multivariate analysis of variances: repeated measures, within-between interaction), showing that a sample of 162 participants was necessary to detect medium effects with a significance level of .05 and a power of .90.
4. Intervention The iWork.COMP is a short-term and low-time consuming internet delivery CFT-based intervention specifically designed to mitigate the impact of toxic leadership styles through the development of compassionate motivation in the workforce of EU hospitals. The iWork.COMP encompasses 8 individual sessions (20 minutes each; mixed format including text, audio and video presentations), which will be available weekly for participants at the KEEPCARING website (https://keepcaring.eu). Each session has three parts. Part 1 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at that moment and on the source of their stress (if applicable). In Part 2, the theme of the session is developed. Finally, Part 3 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at the end of the session and on the usefulness of the session; an optional open question to provide feedback will also be displayed.
At the end of the iWork.COMP, participants will have full access to a SOS-Button tool, which aims to provide short-term exercises when one is dealing with an acute stressful situation.
5. Measures During the four assessment moments, both TG and WLCG participants will answer a set of questionnaires already validated for the Portuguese population, aimed at measuring toxic leadership styles (Toxic Leadership Scale; TLS); deviant personality traits (Dirty Dozen; DD); burnout (Burnout Assessment Tool; BAT-12); wellbeing (Daniels's Five-Factor Measure; D-FAW), and compassion (Fears of Compassion Scales; FCS). A detailed description of these questionnaires will be presented in the outcome measures section.
6. Data analysis The data will be analyzed with SPSS v29 and Mplus v8 statistical software. Preliminary analyses, namely for comparisons between groups at baseline on sociodemographic data and outcome measures, will resort to independent-samples t-tests and chi-square tests. Internal consistency calculations will be based on Cronbach's alpha guidelines. To test the efficacy of the iWork.COMP, data will be analyzed both at an individual (Reliable Change Index) and group level (Latent Growth Curve Models). If Latent Growth Curve models don't present acceptable fit indices, treatment effects will be assessed through MANOVAs.
7. Ethical Considerations To address any ethical considerations, a series of procedures will be carried out.
First, all procedures involved in this project will be allied with the ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and the European Code of Conduct for Research Integrity. Applicable national laws and regulations will also be followed. Moreover, all procedures were approved by the Ethics Committee of the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Coimbra (CEDI/FPCEUC: 97/4).
Second, after the selection and randomization of the health care units, it will be conducted a series of meetings with the leaders and staff of the units. These meetings intend to inform about the nature and aims of the study, to explain the assessment procedures, to clarify any doubt that may arise, and to invite them to voluntarily participate. It will be explained that their decision to participate or not will have no negative consequences or monetary rewards, and that they can withdraw from the study at any time without further explanation. Confidentiality and anonymity will be guaranteed. Participants will fulfil a written informed consent.
Third, participants will be asked to provide their e-mail address (optional). The e-mail addresses will not be linked with the individual data of participants and will only be used to notify them regarding the availability of the sessions (for the TG) and/or assessment periods (for both TG and WLCG). Participants can ask to be removed from the mailing list at any time without further explanations.
Four, to assure data confidentiality, the following procedures will be carried out: 1) use of a system code in each research protocol; 2) unpair the research protocol and the informed consent, to maintain participants' anonymity; 3) collect personal data strictly necessary for research purposes; 4) enter data in statistical software, analyzing them exclusively in a collective way; 5) use of respondent-specific codes to link data from one time-point to the next.
Fifth, although participants in the WLCG will not receive any intervention during the study period, they will be able to access the iWork.COMP program (and then to the SOS-Button tool) after the study completion, if they choose to.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Treatment Group
The TG will receive iWork.COMP. The iWork.COMP is an 8-week internet delivery intervention based on CFT, aimed at reducing the impact of toxic leadership styles through the development of a compassionate motivation. After this period, participants will have access to the SOS-Button tool. Participants in this group will be assessed in four assessment-points (4-weeks intervals; approximately 10 minutes per assessment point): baseline, middle of the intervention, post-treatment, four-week follow-up.
iWork.Comp
The iWork.COMP is a short-term and low-time consuming internet delivery CFT-based intervention specifically designed to mitigate the impact of toxic leadership styles through the development of compassionate motivation in the workforce of EU hospitals. The iWork.COMP encompasses 8 individual sessions (20 minutes each; mixed format including text, audio and video presentations), which will be available weekly for participants at the KEEPCARING website (https://keepcaring.eu). Each session has three parts. Part 1 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at that moment and on the source of their stress (if applicable). In Part 2, the theme of the session is developed. Finally, Part 3 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at the end of the session and on the usefulness of the session; an optional open question to provide feedback will also be displayed.
Waiting List Control Group
This group will not receive any intervention during the study period. However, the access to the iWork.COMP program (and then to the SOS-Button tool) will be available after the study completion, if they choose to. Participants in this group will be assessed in four assessment-point (4-weeks intervals; approximately 10 minutes per assessment point): baseline, middle of the intervention, post-treatment, four-week follow-up.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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iWork.Comp
The iWork.COMP is a short-term and low-time consuming internet delivery CFT-based intervention specifically designed to mitigate the impact of toxic leadership styles through the development of compassionate motivation in the workforce of EU hospitals. The iWork.COMP encompasses 8 individual sessions (20 minutes each; mixed format including text, audio and video presentations), which will be available weekly for participants at the KEEPCARING website (https://keepcaring.eu). Each session has three parts. Part 1 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at that moment and on the source of their stress (if applicable). In Part 2, the theme of the session is developed. Finally, Part 3 encompasses a brief check-in on the stress level of the participant at the end of the session and on the usefulness of the session; an optional open question to provide feedback will also be displayed.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Aged over 18 years old;
* Assuming both leader and non-leader roles.
Exclusion Criteria
18 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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European Union (Horizon Europe Programme)
UNKNOWN
University of Coimbra
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Diana Ribeiro da Silva
Principal Investigator
Locations
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Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences of the University of Coimbra
Coimbra, , Portugal
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Batra K, Singh TP, Sharma M, Batra R, Schvaneveldt N. Investigating the Psychological Impact of COVID-19 among Healthcare Workers: A Meta-Analysis. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Dec 5;17(23):9096. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17239096.
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Other Identifiers
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HORIZON-HLTH-2023-CARE-04
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
101137244
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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