The purpose of this study is to learn how well family therapy works if given while a family member is being treated for a serious illness and whether it helps their family to continue meeting for a time after their death. The therapy aims to assist the family communication and support during both palliative care and bereavement. The investigators also want to learn how many family therapy sessions spread out over time are best for helping patients and their families. Patients are randomly assigned to one of three groups: patients who receive standard palliative care, patients and their families who take part in 6 sessions, and patients and their families who take part in 10 sessions.
This Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) seeks to test the efficacy and dose responsiveness of a manualized family therapy intervention called Family Focused Grief Therapy (FFGT), which is delivered to families of patients with advanced disease and continued into bereavement. Randomization is to three arms: 6 sessions of FFGT, 10 sessions of FFGT, or standard care. The study also explores the potential mediators of effective outcome, empowering further refinement of the intervention, and undertakes an analysis of health-related costs of bereavement care. It is a multi-site study involving Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases (a comprehensive cancer center), Calvary Hospital (a dedicated palliative care hospital with home hospice care program)and Beth Israel (a medical center with a dedicated pain and palliative care department. Consenting families will be assessed at baseline through completion of questionnaires that appraise each individual's psychosocial well-being and perception of their family's functioning. Therapy will be delivered by family therapists (social workers, psychologists, and psychiatrists), who will attend regular supervision sessions to sustain fidelity of the model of intervention. Follow-up of family members for psychosocial well-being, perceptions of family functioning, and costs of heath-related care will occur at 3, 6, 9, \& 13 months after the patient's death or completion of therapy sessions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
700
6 Sessions of Family Focused Group Therapy (FFGT). The FFGT intervention will have assessment, focused therapy, consolidation, and termination phases. The first two sessions are assessment sessions and occur one week apart. There will be two or six focused intervention sessions depending on the predetermined length of therapy. The first focused intervention session is approximately two weeks after the last assessment session. Subsequent focused intervention sessions are expected to follow once every month. Finally, there will be two consolidation/termination sessions, which will occur one time each, approximately two months apart. The six session program is expected to extend over a period of 6 months and the 10 session program over 10 months.
10 Sessions of Family Focused Group Therapy (FFGT). The FFGT intervention will have assessment, focused therapy, consolidation, and termination phases. The first two sessions are assessment sessions and occur one week apart. There will be two or six focused intervention sessions depending on the predetermined length of therapy. The first focused intervention session is approximately two weeks after the last assessment session. Subsequent focused intervention sessions are expected to follow once every month. Finally, there will be two consolidation/termination sessions, which will occur one time each, approximately two months apart. The six session program is expected to extend over a period of 6 months and the 10 session program over 10 months
Standard of Care Families assigned to the Usual Care Condition will receive standard psychosocial care which is based on the following patterns: Social work consultations are routinely provided to the cancer patients, but relatives are only seen during admissions or upon request.
Beth Israel Hospice Program
New York, New York, United States
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
New York, New York, United States
Calvary Hospital
The Bronx, New York, United States
Evaluate the efficacy and dose responsiveness of family intervention in preventing bereavement and depression compared with standard palliative care among family members and to examine whether distress moderates impact of FFGT
Time frame: 5 years
Evaluate whether family coping and communication mediate the impact of FFGT and examine costs of FFGT and standard palliative care, and whether the additional costs are offset by reductions in community health utilization
Time frame: 5 years
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