Summary

Eligibility
for people ages 40 years and up (full criteria)
Healthy Volunteers
healthy people welcome
Location
at La Jolla, California
Dates
study started
completion around
Principal Investigator
by Brent T Mausbach, PhD
Headshot of Brent T Mausbach
Brent T Mausbach

Description

Summary

Caregivers suffer great amounts of distress that significantly impacts their mental and physical well-being, yet caregivers' access to quality, evidence-based care is currently very limited. The public health significance of the proposed study is that our internet and mobile-based web intervention will (1) significantly reduce caregiver distress and improve caregivers' overall well-being, and (2) dramatically increase caregivers' access to high quality, evidence-based care at relatively low cost.

Details

Over 15 million men and women provide informal caregiving services to family members who have dementia. The literature is replete with evidence that caregiving results in high rates of depression and distress, and potentially high rates of physical morbidity. For example, 40% of caregivers are at risk for depression compared to just 5% of non-caregiving older adults. Further, increased symptoms of depression and distress in caregivers are associated with accelerated risk for developing cardiovascular disease. Thus, efficacious interventions for reducing caregiver distress appear potentially valuable for both mental and physical well-being.

Given the distress experienced by caregivers, it is no surprise that over 80 intervention studies for reducing caregiver distress have been published. The message from these studies is that caregiver interventions, in general, are effective for reducing distress. Yet, the implementation of Evidence Based Treatments (EBTs) continues to be a challenge. Despite identification of EBTs, their use at the community-level has been absent. In 2007, NIH sponsored a workshop on the use of EBTs for caregivers. The conclusion was that "The majority of effective interventions for caregivers were not being implemented through the aging network." Ten years later, this lack of implementation remains. It is critical that scientists develop interventions for caregivers with maximal reach and minimal cost. Currently, most caregiver intervention frameworks require caregivers to meet with a therapist in one of four formats: a) face-to-face meetings with a therapist outside the caregiver's home, b) face-to-face meetings with a therapist in the caregiver's home, c) in-person, group-based meetings, or d) phone-based interventions in which caregivers call a therapist or support group. While possibly efficacious, these therapeutic formats are limited because: a) community agencies serving caregivers do not offer EBTs, b) the interventions are often not accessible to caregivers who reside outside the care network, c) they require caregivers to attend therapy sessions on specific days and times that may not be convenient for them, or d) they may require caregivers to find alternate care for their care recipients while they attend the therapy. To address these limitations, the investigators have adapted an evidence-based, brief Behavioral Activation (BA) program to be delivered to caregivers via mobile phones with internet-based capabilities, thereby increasing caregivers' access to quality care. This mobile intervention is now being tested in this full-scale trial. The investigators will test mechanisms of action, namely that increased behavioral activation promotes well-being in caregivers. To do so, the investigators will recruit and randomize 200 caregivers to receive either a mobile BA intervention (N = 100) known as the mobile pleasant events program (mPEP), or a web-based bibliotherapy condition (N = 100) teaching skills on coping with caregiving. Participants will be assessed for depressive symptoms, positive and negative affect, well-being, and blood pressure at baseline, 3-months, 9-months, and 15-months follow-up time points.

Keywords

Depressive Symptoms, Stress, Psychological, Depression, Psychological Stress, mPEP, Bibliotherapy

Eligibility

You can join if…

Open to people ages 40 years and up

-

- English-speaking - Spouse or Child Caregiver of a loved-one with Alzheimer's Disease or Related Dementia (ADRD) - Aged 40 years or older at the time of enrollment - Providing at least 20 hours of in-home care per week - Screening positive for mild depressive symptoms (CESD-R≥16).

You CAN'T join if...

-

- Diagnosed with a terminal illness - Demonstrates cognitive impairment (MMSE<27) - Severe hypertension (>200/120 mm Hg) - Participating in another active caregiver intervention (other than support groups) - Receiving psychiatric care for serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder

Location

  • University of California San Diego accepting new patients
    La Jolla California 92093 United States

Lead Scientist at UCSD

  • Brent T Mausbach, PhD
    Dr. Mausbach obtained his PhD in Clinical Psychology from the Pacific Graduate School of Psychology in Palo Alto, CA. He completed his clinical psychology internship at the VA Black Hills Healthcare System, after which he received post-doctoral training at both Stanford University and UCSD with a specialization in Geropsychiatry.

Details

Status
accepting new patients
Start Date
Completion Date
(estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Diego
ID
NCT03506945
Study Type
Interventional
Participants
Expecting 200 study participants
Last Updated