The purpose of this study is to investigate if a brief online-delivered cognitive-behavioral intervention can reduce the degree of dysfunctional worry related to the Covid-19 pandemic, compared to a wait-list control condition.
Worries about the immediate and long-term consequences of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic are largely justified in the current climate of uncertainty. However, dysfunctional worry, that is, pervasive worry that is disproportionate in its intensity or duration, and that significantly interferes with every-day problem-solving or goal-driven behavior, is clearly counterproductive. Research has also indicated that repeated media exposure to a community crisis can lead to increased anxiety and heightened stress responses, that can give a downstream effect on health, and misplaced health-protective and help-seeking behaviors which, in turn, may overburden health care facilities. There is an urgent need to develop a brief, scalable intervention to target such dysfunctional worry in the general population. The current randomized controlled trial will evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of a brief online-delivered cognitive behavioral intervention designed to target dysfunctional worry related to the Covid-19 pandemic. 670 individuals are randomized to intervention or to waiting-list. The hypothesis is that the brief self-guided intervention will show significant within-group reductions in self-rated worry from baseline (week 0) to post-treatment (week 3), and that these improvements will be larger than those seen in the wait-list control group. The wait-list group will be crossed over to receive the intervention after three weeks (post-treatment). All participants will be followed-up one month and one year after the end of the intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
670
The intervention focuses on 1) teaching participants how to discriminate between functional and dysfunctional worry (what are solvable problems vs. what is worry, i.e. unsolvable thoughts?) 2) providing participants with skills to solve functional worry topics (e.g. set time and make a workable plan to be prepared for possible negative outcomes \[e.g. becoming unemployed\]), 3) helping participants to reduce unhelpful behaviors that may reinforce worry (e.g., limit excessive news consumption, refrain from assurance seeking behaviors), 4) providing participants with skills to approach dysfunctional worry (e.g., not engage in worrisome thoughts, just leave them), and 5) increase the behavioral repertoire (take walks, engage in activities that promote health without putting oneself at risk to become infected).
Karolinska Institutet
Stockholm, Sweden
• Covid-19-adapted version of the self-rated Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale-7 (GAD-7)
A 7-item self-rated scale to assess symtom severity of worry. Total score ranging from 0 to 21. Effects will be expressed as the change from baseline to last post-treatment value (Week 0-Week 3) period. Effects will also be assessed at one month and one year post-treatment.
Time frame: Basline (week 0), during treatment (week 1 and week 2), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale - Self report (MADRS-S)
A 9-item self-rated scale to assess symtoms of depression.Total score ranging from 0 to 54.
Time frame: Baseline (week 0), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Adapted Covid-19 version of the Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS)
A 5-item self-rated scale adapted to measure impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on work and social functioning. Total score ranging from 0 to 40.
Time frame: Basline (week 0), during treatment (week 1 and week 2), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Insomnia Severity Index (ISI)
A 7-item self-rated scale to asess severity of insomnia symtoms. Total score ranging from 0 to 28.
Time frame: Baseline (week 0), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Adapted Swedish version of the CoRonavIruS Health Impact Survey (CRISIS)
A self-rated scale to assess Coronavirus/covid-19 health/exposure status, life changes, changes in daily behaviors, impact on emotions/worries, changes in media use past two weeks and changes in substance use due to coronavirus/covid-19 crisis. The scale has bees translated to Swedish and adopted to a Swedish context.
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Time frame: Baseline (week 0), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Intolerance of uncertainty Scale (IUS)
A 12-item self-rated scale to assess intolerance of uncertainty. Total score ranging from 12 to 60.
Time frame: Baseline (week 0), post treatment (week 3), at one-month after treatment and also one year follow up.
Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire (PSQ)
A self-rated scale to assess treamtent satisfaction.
Time frame: Post treatment (week 3)
Adverse events (AE)
A self-rated questionnaire with free text options to assess adverse events du to the intervention.
Time frame: Post treatment (week 3)