The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if Emotion-Focused Therapy (EFT) works to reduce symptoms of Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) in adults. PGD happens when the pain of losing a loved one lasts a long time and causes serious problems in daily life. * The main questions this study aims to answer are: 1. Does EFT lower grief symptoms in adults with PGD? 2. Does EFT also help with related problems, such as anxiety, depression, trauma, and overall distress? * Who can take part: Adults (18 years or older) who lost a loved one at least 6 months ago and meet the criteria for PGD. \- What will happen in the study: Participants will be randomly assigned to one of two groups: 1. EFT group: 8 to 10 weekly, face-to-face therapy sessions with a trained therapist. 2. Self-help group: 10 weekly self-help exercises based on EFT, completed on their own. * All participants will complete questionnaires on grief, mood, and well-being before starting, during the study, at the end of treatment (12 weeks), and again at 5 months and 12 months after starting. * In the EFT group, the therapeutic relationship will also be measured during sessions 3 and 8. * Why this study is important: Most current treatments for grief are based on cognitive-behavioral therapy, but not everyone benefits from them. EFT is a promising therapy that focuses on emotions and has shown positive results for other mental health problems. This trial will test if EFT can be an effective treatment for people struggling with prolonged grief.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
128
The EFT intervention will follow the model described in EFT for grief. Its main goal is to transform core emotional pain (e.g., chronic shame) by activating change-inducing emotions (e.g., assertive anger), a process described as "changing emotion with emotion." This work takes place within a safe and supportive therapeutic relationship, characterized by the therapist's empathic, accepting, and compassionate stance. Therapists remain attuned to emotional markers (e.g., self-criticism, unfinished business) that signal opportunities for targeted work on specific affective problems, which are usually addressed through experiential tasks such as the Empty-Chair for Unfinished Business. Although EFT is transdiagnostic, grief work has certain distinctive features, such as the central role of experiencing grief-related sadness and fostering a sense of connection with the deceased.
The self-help intervention consists of 10 written exercises designed to address different aspects of grief. These include psychoeducation, emotional regulation, focusing on bodily awareness, softening self-criticism, reducing avoidance, managing anxiety and fear, clarifying confusing emotional reactions, processing trauma, imaginal dialogues with the deceased, and cultivating compassion.
Unidad Clínica de Psicología de la Universidad Pontificia Comillas (UNINPSI)
Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Prolonged Grief Scale 13 - Revised
Higher scores indicate greater symptomatology of Prolonged Grief Disorder; a score of 30 or higher meets the clinical threshold for Prolonged Grief Disorder.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the research at 1 year follow-up
Centrality of Event Scale
Higher scores indicate greater trauma symptomatology
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the reserch at 1 year follow-up
Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-10
Higher scores indicate greater psychological distress
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the reserch at 1 year follow-up
Patients Health Questionnarie 9
Higher scores indicate greater psychological distress
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the reserch at 1 year follow-up
Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 Scale
Higher scores indicate greater GAD symptomatology
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of the reserch at 1 year follow-up
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