RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06646692

Mindful Self-Compassion to Address PTSD and Substance Use in Unhoused Women


Sponsor

University of California, Los Angeles

Enrollment

202 participants

Start Date

May 5, 2024

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Trauma exposure, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and substance use disorder (SUD) present major threats to public health. PTSD and SUD are major correlates of disability, often resulting in severe social and occupational impairment. Comorbidity between PTSD and SUD (PTSD/SUD) is common and frequently co-occurs with other mental health ailments including depression, anxiety, and suicidality. Comorbidity may be amplified in groups vulnerable to high trauma exposure, such as women with low socioeconomic status including women experiencing homelessness (WEH). Moreover, the reciprocal nature of PTSD/SUD (substances are used to cope with PTSD symptoms; substance use can create high-risk situations for new traumas to occur), can create a cycle of trauma and symptomatology leading to a critical health disparity. PTSD/SUD can be costly and difficult to treat, with treatment completion often low and relapse rates often high. Low-cost, complementary interventions, such as self-compassion (SC) interventions, which target key mechanisms that maintain PTSD/SUD, could improve treatment outcomes. SC interventions include practices that build skills to improve emotional responses, cognitive understanding, and mindfulness. Recent research supports the benefit of SC interventions for reducing PTSD, SUD, and related comorbidities, potentially with large effects. However, sample sizes have generally been small and randomized designs infrequently used. Moreover, while SC interventions may act to improve key mechanisms of treatment response and/or symptom maintenance (e.g., emotion regulation/dysregulation, trauma-related guilt, trauma-related shame, moral injury, and craving), such mediating factors have been underexplored. To address these limitations, the present proposal will implement community-based research principles and use a two phase, mixed-method design to adapt and test a widely used SC intervention (Mindful Self Compassion; MSC) for use with a sample of WEH with PTSD/SUD. The project will be conducted in partnership with a state-funded drug treatment facility that serves women and families experiencing high health disparities. Phase I was completed in 2023 and adapted the standard MSC course for use with trauma-exposed WEH with PTSD/SUD using the ADAPT-ITT model, an eight-stage model that engages community partners to increase feasibility and acceptability of interventions for at-risk populations. Phase II will be an open-label cluster randomized clinical trial (N=202) to test the benefit of the adapted MSC at improving primary (PTSD, substance use) and secondary outcomes (depression, anxiety, hopelessness) among a sample of WEH with PTSD/SUD residing in a residential drug treatment site. MSC (n=101) will be compared to Treatment as Usual (TAU; n=101). WEH in the MSC group will complete a 6-week (six sessions plus a half-day retreat) MSC intervention. The TAU group will engage in weekly check-ins with the research team but will not receive an intervention. WEH will be assessed at baseline, immediately post-intervention, and at a 4-month follow-up. One-on-one interviews will be conducted with the MSC group to collect qualitative data on experiences. An exploratory aim will be to elucidate mechanism of treatment-response and maintenance or remission of PTSD symptoms. These potential mechanisms will include SC, emotion regulation/dysregulation, trauma-related guilt, trauma-related shame, moral injury, and craving. Results may inform treatment for PTSD/SUD in WEH and other groups experiencing high health disparities and provide valuable insights into mechanisms underlying PTSD/SUD symptoms over time. Findings are relevant to military populations, which experience high rates of PTSD/SUD, and other populations disproportionately exposed to trauma.


Eligibility

Sex: FEMALEMin Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is testing whether a Mindful Self-Compassion (MSC) program can help unhoused women who have post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance use challenges. The program teaches mindfulness and self-compassion skills to help manage trauma symptoms. **You may be eligible if...** - You identify as a woman - You are 18 years or older - You screen positive for probable PTSD (based on a questionnaire score of 31 or higher) - You have experienced homelessness in the past 6 months, or were homeless before a period of incarceration - You do not have significant cognitive impairment - You are able to speak and understand English **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You are unable to speak or understand English - You have significant cognitive impairment based on a screening test - You do not meet the other inclusion criteria listed above Talk to your doctor or case worker to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

BEHAVIORALMindful Self Compassion

(MSC) is a mind-body integrative health intervention that utilizes meditations, other contemplative practices, home practices, and experiential exercises (including group discussions) to increase SC. MSC can be done in groups of 10-25. To increase feasibility of MSC for use in residential drug treatment facilities, we will aim to adapt MSC to 7 sessions (6 weekly sessions in alignment with the MSC short course plus the half day retreat included in the full course to facilitate skill consolidation). Sessions will be conducted in a group-based format: prior research found group-based formats equivalent to individual-level interventions for PTSD/SUD.

BEHAVIORALTreatment as Usual (TAU)

Selecting appropriate attention control groups for behavioral intervention research, particularly for mindfulness-based interventions, can be problematic. Comparator groups often also improve as they tend to target related mechanisms (e.g., social support, health behaviors, improved attention). After weighing the pros and cons, a "treatment as usual" (TAU) approach was selected, whereby the MSC will be compared to TAU. However, to control for the confound of weekly compensation, TAU participants will meet with study staff seven times over the 6-week period and fill out short psychosocial surveys on non-distressing topics (e.g., personality tests, attitudes surveys) in exchange for compensation commensurate with the MSC group. We believe this will also help with retention of the TAU group over time and strike an appropriate balance between controlling for the effects of study participation while minimizing confounds that often occur with active control groups in behavioral trials.


Locations(1)

Prototypes

Pomona, California, United States

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NCT06646692


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