Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Nutrition Workshop for Parents of Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Initial Effectiveness
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What is the acceptability of the iACT-P workshop in terms of recruitment, retention, and perceived parent impact?
- Do parents attending the iACT-P workshop experience a reduction in stress, anxiety, depression, and increase in psychological flexibility as evidenced by increased cognitive defusion, mindfulness, and values-based living immediately after and 3 months after workshop attendance?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Intervention
2.2. Evaluation
2.2.1. Study Design
2.2.2. Participants
2.2.3. Procedure
2.2.4. Measures
- Recruitment: accrual rate of >70%;
- Retention: attrition rate of <15%, technical difficulties reported by <10% of parents, attendance rate of >80%;
- Parent perceived acceptability of iACT-P: treatment evaluation inventory [34] and qualitative feedback from parents post-iACT-P interview.
- Parent reported questionnaires: parent psychological flexibility questionnaire [35,36,37], mindful attention awareness scale [38,39,40], parental acceptance and action questionnaire [41,42], valuing questionnaire [43,44,45], cognitive fusion questionnaire [46,47,48], depression, anxiety, and stress scale [49,50,51], and qualitative feedback from the parent post-iACT-P interview. See Table 2 for description of psychosocial measures.
2.2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Participants
3.2. Treatment Acceptability
3.2.1. Recruitment
3.2.2. Retention
3.2.3. Parent Perceived Acceptability
3.3. Preliminary Effectiveness
3.3.1. Quantitative Outcomes
3.3.2. Qualitative Outcomes
What I realized, I know there are other parents too, but now I realize lots of parents with kids they are just like us and they are also having the same problems we are having so it was good when we met a group of parents and when they tell us their stories, we feel more confident, more brave. there are other people too facing these kinds of issues and this made me feel that we aren’t alone. P011
I liked that there were other parents involved because then it makes you realize you aren’t an island and you aren’t the only one going through it and other families are experiencing the same things with a child with IBD and realizing you aren’t the only one and giving you a place to see how other people are handling it. P017
…hearing [facilitator] talk about validating for us as parents how hard it is and honestly if that’s all I heard in my 3 weeks that was the greatest thing I could have heard because we aren’t hearing that in terms of when we go to clinic it is all about the child as it should be and so we aren’t getting that support, we get it from each other I’ve been active in trying to create parent groups so we are finding those ways to get some of that validation with other parents but to hear the psychologist say that validated every heartache and frustration that I feel. P008
…it also tells me that we are still not feeling as informed as we would like to be. In 6 years, I’ve never been handed a piece of paper and I’m very much ‘knowledge is power’. As parents there is so much frustration because we can’t take away what our kids are going through. But, if we are more informed, and the better informed we are, I think we feel better in the process and more empowered in the process. P008
…mindfulness, it’s honestly it’s not my thing and my 15 year old with Crohn’s its not her thing and we are trying to embrace it a little more because there were some really good tips but I’ve come on board a little more. P019
The only thing that really hit home was one specific point which was…the point was made about how sometimes kids come to you and they sort of dump their problems on you, but they don’t really want you to solve their problems. They don’t want you to give them solutions they just want you to listen and as parents we tend to want to fix things for them and sometimes that’s not always what we should be doing or that’s maybe not what they want us to do. And that was probably the most significant point that I took home from the 3 sessions. P023
One of the biggest skills I learned from this was lay off. Lay off your child. Let him be. Let him breathe. Let him figure it out. And he voices that all the time. But I always thought, I’m a mom, he’s a teenager, let him keep yelling at me and saying, ‘mom stop this, stop this, why do you always keep asking me?’ I thought I just always have to continue being persistent because that’s who we are, we’re parents, so you keep pushing forward. But when a child is dealing with an illness, I think as a parent you just need to give them time to breathe and let your child come to you. And I think that is my biggest advantage or the biggest learning piece I’ve taken away from this. P009
The whole mindfulness piece really comes across loud and clear. I never thought of it in relation to my child it was always in my own day to day life but thinking about how to manage that kind of made me more aware and now taking a bit of a step back with what’s happening and especially because we’ve been going through a pretty rough time in the past couple of weeks. P027
…trying to stay calm through whatever experience or difficult time you are going through and take care of yourself, learn to take care of yourself because if you take care of yourself you can take care of your children. P031
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Session Number | Concepts Covered | Exercises and Activities |
---|---|---|
1 |
|
|
2 |
|
|
3 |
|
|
Measure | Domain Measured | Subscales | Score Range | Cronbach’s Alpha (Baseline, Immediate, 3-Month) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Parent Psychological Flexibility Questionnaire [35] (PPFQ, 17 items) | Psychological flexibility | Values-based action, emotional acceptance, pain acceptance, pain willingness | Total score: 0–102 Higher scores indicate greater flexibility | 0.93 |
0.95 | ||||
0.96 | ||||
Mindful Attention Awareness Scale [38] (MAAS, 15 items) | Mindfulness | - | Average score: 1–6 Higher scores indicate greater mindfulness | 0.92 |
0.94 | ||||
0.94 | ||||
Parental Acceptance and Action Questionnaire [41] (PAAQ, 15 items) | Experiential avoidance | Inaction, unwillingness | Total score: 0–105 Lower scores indicate a lower level of parental experiential avoidance | 0.72 |
0.70 | ||||
0.74 | ||||
Valuing Questionnaire [43] (VQ, 10 items) | Valued living | Progress, obstruction | Total score per subscale: 0–30 Higher progress scores reflect greater enactment of values Lower obstruction scores reflect lower disruption of valued living | Progress: |
0.89 | ||||
0.83 | ||||
0.87 | ||||
Obstruction: | ||||
0.87 | ||||
0.81 | ||||
0.86 | ||||
Cognitive Fusion Questionnaire [46] (CFQ, 7 items) | Cognitive fusion | - | Total score: 7–49Lower scores indicate a lower level of cognitive fusion | 0.97 |
0.96 | ||||
0.96 | ||||
Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale [49] (DASS, 21 items) | Symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress | Depression, anxiety, stress | Total score per subscale: 0–42Lower scores indicate fewer symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress Scores are classified as normal, mild, moderate, severe, and extremely severe | Depression: |
0.93 | ||||
0.91 | ||||
0.90 | ||||
Anxiety: | ||||
0.91 | ||||
0.80 | ||||
0.82 | ||||
Stress: | ||||
0.84 | ||||
0.85 | ||||
0.89 |
Age | |
30–39 years old n (%) | 8 (22%) |
40–49 years old n (%) | 22 (59%) |
50–59 years old n (%) | 7 (19%) |
Sex | |
Male n (%) | 5 (14%) |
Female n (%) | 32 (86%) |
Self-Identified Ethnicity | |
North American n (%) | 10 (27%) |
South American n (%) | 1 (3%) |
Caribbean n (%) | 1 (3%) |
European n (%) | 6 (16%) |
Jewish n (%) | 4 (11%) |
Middle Eastern n (%) | 4 (11%) |
East Asian n (%) | 1 (3%) |
South or Southeast Asian n (%) | 10 (27%) |
Education | |
Some college/technical school n (%) | 2 (5%) |
Graduated college/technical school n (%) | 26 (70%) |
Graduate degree n (%) | 9 (25%) |
Employment | |
Unemployed n (%) | 4 (11%) |
Part-time n (%) | 6 (16%) |
Full-time n (%) | 26 (70%) |
Retired n (%) | 1 (3%) |
Income | |
Less than $25,000 n (%) | 2 (5%) |
$25,000 to $49,999 n (%) | 0 (0%) |
$50,000 to $74,999 n (%) | 4 (11%) |
$75,000 to $99,999 n (%) | 4 (11%) |
$100,000 to $150,000 n (%) | 7 (19%) |
Above $150,000 n (%) | 13 (35%) |
Did not wish to answer n (%) | 7 (19%) |
Marital Status | |
Married or living common-law n (%) | 33 (89%) |
Widow or widower n (%) | 1 (3%) |
Separated n (%) | 1 (3%) |
Divorced n (%) | 2 (5%) |
Child’s Demographics | |
Age, years mean (SD) | 12.27 (3.91) |
Age, years range | 4–17 |
Sex | |
Female n (%) | 21 (57%) |
Male n (%) | 16 (43%) |
Diagnosis | |
Crohn’s n (%) | 19 (51%) |
Ulcerative Colitis n (%) | 16 (43%) |
IBD-U n (%) | 2 (6%) |
Years since child’s diagnosis, years mean (SD) | 2.14 (2.23) |
Years since child’s diagnosis, years range | 0–6 |
Parent Feedback | iACT-P Adaptation |
---|---|
Sessions of 90 min were too long |
|
Request for more in-depth nutrition guidance |
|
Request for more discussion and space to ask each other questions |
|
Measure | Mean (SD) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Range | N | Pre | N | Post | N | 3-Month | F | p | |
PPFQ—Total Score | 0–102 | 34 | 45.34 (17.37) | 31 | 44.88 (21.16) | 30 | 47.21 (21.68) | 1.38 | 0.26 |
MAAS—Total Score | 1–6 | 35 | 3.96 (0.90) | 33 | 3.66 (0.89) | 33 | 4.02 (0.93) | 0.12 | 0.89 |
PAAQ—Total Score | 15–105 | 34 | 64.50 (10.46) | 35 | 63.80 (9.99) | 29 | 63.21 (9.74) | 0.53 | 0.60 |
CFQ–Total Score | 7–49 | 34 | 23.12 (10.37) | 32 | 23.00 (9.56) | 30 | 21.09 (10.22) | 2.89 | 0.06 |
VQ | |||||||||
Progress | 0–30 | 35 | 20.52 (5.57) | 32 | 19.70 (5.48) | 29 | 19.45 (6.63) | 0.30 | 0.74 |
Obstruction | 0–30 | 34 | 10.97 (6.56) | 32 | 11.44 (5.80) | 29 | 10.45 (6.49) | 0.09 | 0.91 |
DASS | |||||||||
Depression | 0–42 | 34 | 8.59 (8.38) | 32 | 9.50 (7.48) | 28 | 8.35 (7.30) | 0.20 | 0.82 |
Anxiety | 0–42 | 34 | 7.90 (8.78) | 32 | 9.50 (7.80) | 28 | 8.57 (6.93) | 0.25 | 0.78 |
Stress | 0–42 | 34 | 15.51 (7.64) | 32 | 15.39 (7.63) | 28 | 13.54 (7.74) | 0.27 | 0.76 |
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Ahola Kohut, S.; Martincevic, I.; Turrell, S.L.; Church, P.C.; Walters, T.D.; Weiser, N.; Iuliano, A. Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Nutrition Workshop for Parents of Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Initial Effectiveness. Children 2021, 8, 396. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050396
Ahola Kohut S, Martincevic I, Turrell SL, Church PC, Walters TD, Weiser N, Iuliano A. Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Nutrition Workshop for Parents of Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Initial Effectiveness. Children. 2021; 8(5):396. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050396
Chicago/Turabian StyleAhola Kohut, Sara, Inez Martincevic, Sheri L. Turrell, Peter C. Church, Thomas D. Walters, Natalie Weiser, and Armanda Iuliano. 2021. "Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Nutrition Workshop for Parents of Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Initial Effectiveness" Children 8, no. 5: 396. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050396
APA StyleAhola Kohut, S., Martincevic, I., Turrell, S. L., Church, P. C., Walters, T. D., Weiser, N., & Iuliano, A. (2021). Online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy and Nutrition Workshop for Parents of Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Feasibility, Acceptability, and Initial Effectiveness. Children, 8(5), 396. https://doi.org/10.3390/children8050396