Older adults with serious illness and their caregivers have high rates of anxiety and limited access to effective, non-pharmacological treatments. A recent National Academy of Medicine report recommended increased emphasis on disseminating and implementing evidence-based psychotherapies in order to have maximal public health impact. Through this work, I will identify a sustainable and potentially scalable dyadic intervention and delivery model to manage symptoms of anxiety in older adults with serious illness and their caregivers in primary care.
Research: Up to 70% of adults with serious illness have symptoms of anxiety. Undiagnosed and undertreated anxiety contributes to higher risk of pain, depression, fatigue, dyspnea, and polypharmacy. Patients with high symptom burden and anxiety heavily impact family caregivers, which nearly 8 million older adults in the U.S. rely on for assistance. Decades of research reveal the negative effects of caregiving on caregivers, (e.g., high levels of stress, depression, and anxiety). Furthermore, there is a mutuality of distress in the caregiver/patient dyad - when patients suffer psychologically, the caregiver suffers too. Unfortunately, older adults and their caregivers have limited access to mental health resources because of shortages of mental health providers as well as logistical issues including time constraints, transportation, and scheduling. The objective of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of Mindfulness Coach, an mHealth Mindfulness Therapy intervention developed by the Veterans Affairs, to reduce anxiety in older adults with serious illness and their family caregivers. An efficacious and scalable behavioral intervention that mitigates symptoms of patient and caregiver anxiety has the potential to reduce distress and enhance coping in the patient-caregiver dyad without contributing to polypharmacy or burdensome appointments. Research is urgently needed to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of dyadic mHealth mindfulness therapy in older adults with serious illness and their caregivers.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
162
This study will use Mindfulness Coach, an iOS- and Android-based app designed to deliver a mindfulness training course centered on Veteran's Affairs (VA) protocols. Developed by the VA's National Center for PTSD, the app provides an engaging introduction to MT, regardless of specific psychiatric illness or patient population. The app provides a training plan with 14 sequential levels, a "practice now" area with evidence-based mindfulness audio exercises, assessments using the Five-Factor Mindfulness Questionnaire Short Form (FFMQ-SF)90, and education about mindfulness. To progress to the next level, the user must interact with every element. The training plan levels include psychoeducation and exercises (guided meditations and seated practices), which increase in duration as users progress. Levels 1,7 and 14 also include an assessment with the FFMQ-SF. The "practice now" area has guided meditations to practice new skills.
A a widely available health and wellness app that provides users with daily content on general health, WebMD, will serve as the attention control. Similar health-based apps have been used as controls in other mHealth psychotherapy intervention trials.100,101 The control group will be instructed to access the app 4x/week (same as intervention group) and will receive an orientation and 2 booster sessions as well. I considered other control group options including treatment as usual, but attention control was selected due to the variability of treatment as usual.
RWJ Barnabas Outpatient Geriatric Clinics
Livingston, New Jersey, United States
RECRUITINGRWJB Outpatient Geriatrics
Monroe, New Jersey, United States
RECRUITINGCancer Institute of New Jersey
New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States
RECRUITINGHospital Anxiety and Depression Scale - Anxiety Sub Scale
Anxiety scale with range from 0-21 with higher scores denoting highest anxiety
Time frame: 6 months
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale - Anxiety Sub Scale
Anxiety scale with range from 0-21 with higher scores denoting highest anxiety
Time frame: 8 weeks
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale - Depression Sub Scale
Depression scale with range from 0-21 with higher scores denoting highest depression
Time frame: 6 months
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale - Depression Sub Scale
Depression scale with range from 0-21 with higher scores denoting highest depression
Time frame: 8 weeks
Perceived stress scale
Scale with range from 0 - 40 with higher values indicating more perceived stress
Time frame: 8 weeks
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