The Institute of Medicine identifies Prolonged Grief (PG) as a critical under-addressed public health problem for which are no empirically supported treatments. The purpose of this application is to pilot-test Behavioral Activation (BA) therapy for PG. BA is a well supported, stand alone intervention for depression and recently applied to posttraumatic stress disorder, which reduces rumination and avoidance behaviors that otherwise thwart access to natural rewarding contingencies and resources. The treatment focuses on promoting stable, active routines, self-care behaviors, enhanced self-efficacy, and reengagement with pleasurable activities and significant social resources. Rumination, disengagement, and low self-efficacy are defining features of PG. Further, in response to loss of intimates, the key factors that differentiate resilient people from those that have difficulties adapting is the maintenance or fast resumption of social and occupational functioning. Thus, the main hypothesis of this study is that BA for PG will result in clinically significant reductions in rumination and functional disengagement. This is a preliminary small-scale pilot assessment of potential efficacy and feasibility of completing a large scale study of BA for PG.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25
Behavioral Activation for Major Depressive Disorder (BA; Martell, Addis, \& Jacobson, 2001) is based on behavioral theories of depression, which posit that psychopathology occurs when active, goal-directed behavioral repertoires have been either unreinforced or punished. These aversive consequences tend to reinforce escape and avoidance behavior, such as passively ruminating on unmet needs and/or deprivations, rather than actively engaging the environment. BA employs operant conditioning principles to increase active, goal-directed behavioral strategies and decrease passive or avoidant behavioral strategies to help people engage with and obtain adequate reinforcement from their environment. Use of BA was based research suggesting that disengagement/avoidance is related to prolonged pathology after loss
University of Nevada, Reno
Reno, Nevada, United States
Change from Baseline in grief symptoms at weeks 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Inventory of Complicated Grief-Revised
Time frame: Assessments occurring in Weeks 1 (Baseline), 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Change from Baseline in PTSD symptoms at weeks 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
PTSD Checklist-Specific
Time frame: Assessments occurring in Weeks 1 (Baseline), 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Change from Baseline in symptoms of Major Depressive Disorder at Weeks 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Depression Anxiety Stress Scales
Time frame: Assessments occurring in Weeks 1 (Baseline), 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Change from Baseline in levels of rumination at Weeks 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Ruminative Response Scale
Time frame: Assessments occurring in Weeks 1 (Baseline), 12, 24, and 36 post randomization
Therapy credibility and client expectancy for improvement after treatment
Credibility/ Expectancy Questionnaire
Time frame: Assessments occurring post-treatment (12 weeks for immediate start group, 24 weeks for delay start group)
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