一项随机研究,旨在评估癌症患者、医护人员和第三者共同冥想与仅由患者进行冥想的潜在附加价值:Implic-2 方案的设计。

IF 3.4 2区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY BMC Cancer Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.1186/s12885-024-12521-1
Virginie Prevost, Titi Tran, Alexandra Leconte, Justine Lequesne, Marie Fernette, Carine Segura, Sylvie Chevigné, Mylène Gouriot, Bénédicte Clarisse
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在肿瘤学领域,病人的痛苦和医护人员的职业倦怠是关键问题。正念冥想是一种有助于改善身心健康的综合方法。虽然大量研究表明冥想对患者和医护人员都有益处,但为患者、医护人员和第三者群体提供共同冥想的附加值尚未得到评估。除了加强照护者和患者之间的关系,向第三方(既不是照护者也不是患者)开放冥想课程还能让患者摆脱疾病的耻辱感。我们之前进行了一项试点研究,通过一项专门设计的计划验证了共同冥想的可行性和相关性:IMPLIC-2 是一项双臂随机研究,旨在评估该冥想计划(在试点研究后进行了优化)的附加值,尤其是对癌症患者(我们的目标人群)的附加值。愿意参加该计划、以前没有定期练习冥想并能参加课程的人都有资格参加。这项研究将包括 96 名参与者:其中包括 16 名医疗专业人员、16 名第三者和 64 名患者。后者将随机分为两组:实验组("共享 "冥想)包括 4 个混合组,每组 8 名患者、4 名医疗专业人员和 4 名第三方;对照组("患者 "冥想)包括 2 个组,每组 16 名患者。将使用经过验证的调查问卷来衡量该计划的效果,特别是在生活质量、感知压力、自我效能感、正念和自我同情的品质以及护理人员的倦怠感等方面。在计划结束时,将对参与者的生活质量变化感和满意度进行测量。此外,还将采用重点小组定性方法作为补充,以优化该计划在研究结束后的实施:讨论:肿瘤患者的福祉将得到改善。与过度劳累的护理人员打交道将对他们与病人的互动方式产生有益的影响。此外,三类人群之间的接触将允许以不同的方式看待他人,并通过促进集体人性来减轻痛苦:试验注册:NCT06041607,注册日期:2023 年 09 月 18 日:试验注册:NCT06041607,注册日期:09/18/2023.试验方案版本:1.2版,日期:08/29/2023.
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A randomised study to evaluate the potential added value of shared meditation involving people with cancer, health professionals and third persons compared to meditation conducted with patients only: design of the Implic-2 protocol.

Background: In oncology, the suffering of patients and the burnout of health professionals are key issues. Mindfulness meditation is a holistic approach that can help to improve well-being. While numerous studies have shown the benefits of meditation for both patients and health professionals, the added value of offering shared meditation to groups of patients, health professionals and third persons has not been assessed. Beyond strengthening the relationship between carers and patients, opening up meditation sessions to third parties (neither carers nor patients) enables patients to escape the stigma of their illness. We previously conducted a pilot study that validated the feasibility and the relevance of shared meditation with a specifically designed programme.

Methods/design: IMPLIC-2 is a two-arm randomised study designed to assess the added value of this meditation programme (optimised following the pilot study), particularly for cancer patients (our target population). People motivated to follow the programme, without previous regular practice of meditation and able to participate in the sessions are eligible. The study will include 96 participants: 16 health professionals, 16 third persons and 64 patients. The latter will be randomized in two arms: the experimental arm ("Shared" meditation) consisting of 4 mixed groups of 8 patients, 4 health professionals and 4 third parties, and the control arm ("Patient" meditation) consisting of 2 groups of 16 patients. Validated questionnaires will be used to measure the effects of the programme, notably in terms of quality of life, perceived stress, feelings of self-efficacy, qualities of mindfulness and self-compassion, and carers' burn-out. Participants' perception of a change in their quality of life and satisfaction will be measured at the end of the programme. A complementary qualitative focus-group approach will be used to optimise implementation of the programme beyond the study.

Discussion: The well-being of oncology patients would be improved. Dealing with overworked carers would have a beneficial impact on the way they interact with patients. In addition, encounters between the three types of population will allow otherness to be viewed differently and alleviate suffering by promoting collective humanity.

Trial registration: NCT06041607, registered: 09/18/2023.

Protocol version: Version n°1.2 dated from 08/29/2023.

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来源期刊
BMC Cancer
BMC Cancer 医学-肿瘤学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
2.60%
发文量
1204
审稿时长
6.8 months
期刊介绍: BMC Cancer is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of cancer research, including the pathophysiology, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of cancers. The journal welcomes submissions concerning molecular and cellular biology, genetics, epidemiology, and clinical trials.
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