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Evaluation of MBCT Implemented in Vietnamese Buddhist Pagoda
Sponsor: Vanderbilt University
Summary
Background Depression presents a substantial public health burden around the world. Evidence-based psychotherapy treatments (psychotherapy EBT) for depression exist but access is often limited, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), by mental health stigma and scarcity of professional mental health providers. One approach to address these issues is mental health task-shifting, transferring mental health services from highly trained mental health professionals operating in formal mental health settings, to non-mental health professionals or lay people receiving focused training in a particular mental health program, operating in non-mental health settings (e.g., schools; religious settings). Purposes of the present study are to (a) adapt Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) for depression - a psychotherapy depression EBT - for implementation in Vietnamese Buddhist pagoda in VN (MBCT-VN); and (b) conduct a cluster-randomized clinical trial of MBCT-VN, implemented in Vietnamese Buddhist pagoda. Vietnamese Buddhist pagoda are selected as the task-shifting site because they represent a potentially low stigma, culturally-congruent site for task-shifting implementation of mindfulness-based mental health treatments. Methods MBCT was adapted for the present project through a collaborative team process, producing the MBCT-VN program. The clinical trial evaluation will involve a cluster-randomized comparison between (a) the treatment condition MBCT-VN, and (b) a treatment-as-usual control condition, Buddhist meditation as implemented in pagoda. To reduce cross-group contamination, pagoda will be the unit of assignment. Outcome assessments will include four timepoints across four months. One hundred and sixty adult participants will be recruited from eight (four treatment; four control) Buddhist pagoda in the Hanoi, Vietnam area. The primary outcome will be level of depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9: PHQ-9); the secondary outcome will be quality of life (Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire: Q-LES-Q). The study will assess and evaluate several Implementation Science factors (e.g., Treatment Acceptability) as well as other potential moderators of treatment effects, and potential mediators such as increase in depression mental health literacy and decrease in depression stigma. Inferential analyses will use a general linear mixed model framework with a latent growth curve framework, with propensity covariates.
Official title: Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression, Implemented in Vietnamese Buddhist Pagoda
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
160
Start Date
2026-02-15
Completion Date
2026-10-15
Last Updated
2025-12-23
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy
Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) is a form of psychotherapy that combines principles of cognitive therapy with mindfulness practices focused on increasing non-judgemental awareness of the present moment. It was designed to help individuals, particularly those with depression, stop rumination and a cycle of negative thought patterns that lead to emotional distress including depression. It is a well established depression EBT. The Vietnamese version of the program (MBCT-VN) is a group treatment involving from five to ten participants (depending on how many participants are able to be recruited) per group.
Treatment-as-usual involving Buddhist meditation
MBCT and other mindfulness interventions were originally derived from Buddhist meditation, modifed to be non-secular and focused on treatment of depression and other mental health and behavioral problems rather than on spiritual development. In the present study, a treatment-as-usual condition involving Buddhist meditation will be used. The project will assess the characteristics of the Buddhist meditation delivered for the control group participants at pagoda meditation retreats but will not influence this control condition in any way.
Locations (1)
VNU University of Education
Hanoi, Vietnam