AIDAII: Motivation and Adherence to Psychotherapy Assignments
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
The aims of this study are to experimentally investigate and compare whether motivation variables can predict adherence to a prescribed assignment in face-to-face and online interventions using a psychotherapy analogue model.
A total of 100 participants are included in this study and randomized to either a face-to-face or online intervention. Participants in both groups receive a psychoeducation session and are given an assignment for the subsequent week.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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N/A |
Detailed Description
The aims of this study are to investigate (1) participants' different forms of motivations to complete a typical psychotherapy assignment, (2) participants' subsequent adherence to the prescribed assignment and the associations between motivations and adherence and (3) any differences regarding motivations, adherence and their associations between the face-to-face and online conditions.
The hypotheses are that participants in the face-to-face condition will report higher motivation as well as higher adherence to the assignments compared to participants in the online condition, that adherence to the assignment will be positively associated with both autonomous motivation and externally regulated motivation and that adherence to the assignment will be more weakly associated with autonomous motivation in the face-to-face compared to the online condition.
To investigate the association between motivation and adherence to assignments in face-to-face and online settings, this study have a longitudinal randomized design with two conditions. The two conditions are face-to-face psychoeducation with a therapist and online psychoeducation with therapist support. A psychotherapy analogue model with a one-session intervention for a non-clinical population is used. Data is collected at baseline and at seven to nine days follow-up.
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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Experimental: Online The Online psychoeducation is presented on on a webpage. |
Behavioral: Online psychoeducation
The online intervention consists of a psychoeducation component taken from affect focused psychotherapy. In this model, emotions are physiological patterns that are shaped mainly in the context of previous relations. By using the model, patients are helped to better understand their current emotions, behaviors and cognitions. The aim of the intervention used in this study is to provide information about the six basic affects and how they may influence everyday behaviors and well-being in recurring patterns.
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Active Comparator: Face-to-face The face-to-face psychoeducation is provided by psychologist and psychology master students. |
Behavioral: Face-to-face psychoeducation
The intervention consists of a psychoeducation component taken from affect focused psychotherapy. In this model, emotions are physiological patterns that are shaped mainly in the context of previous relations. By using the model, patients are helped to better understand their current emotions, behaviors and cognitions. The aim of the intervention used in this study is to provide information about the six basic affects and how they may influence everyday behaviors and well-being in recurring patterns.
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Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Adherence to prescribed behavioral assignment [Within 3 days after intervention end.]
The number of prescribed assignments that each participant have completed.
Secondary Outcome Measures
- Situational Motivation Scale [Within 3 days after intervention end.]
The SIMS is a self-report measure developed based on the Self-determination theory to measure motivation in experimental tasks.
- VAS-scale regarding motivation [Within 3 days after intervention end.]
A Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) measuring homework motivation (scale: 0-100)
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- having at least one problematic behavior one wished to understand or change
Exclusion Criteria:
- being below 18 years of age, having no access to a mobile phone and the Internet, reporting elevated levels of depressive symptoms or currently attending psychotherapy.
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | Uppsala University | Uppsala | Sweden | 75105 |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- Uppsala University
Investigators
- Study Director: Louise Essen, Professor, Uppsala University
Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- AIDA-II