Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Decrease Caregiving Fatigue in Group Leaders of a Support Group for Women After Cancer
Sponsor: Wuerzburg University Hospital
Summary
This exploratory study aims to evaluate the effect of a self-compassion training developed for health professionals on leaders of self-help groups. Hypothesis/primary goal: An online group intervention adapted from the "Self-compassion for health-care communities program" validated for health professionals leads to an increase in self-compassion among leaders of cancer self-help groups. Secondary goals: level of self-compassion at the end of the course as a mediator for therapeutic variables after 6 weeks, decrease in caregiver fatigue, secondary traumatic stress/burnout risk, personal distress and sick leave, decrease in fears of self-compassion/compassion for others; increase in mindfulness, self-efficacy, compassion for others and resilience; direct costs; safety; Intervention: Online group intervention: led by a certified mindfulness teacher for Mindful Self-Compassion and additional qualification in Self-Compassion in Healthcare Communities (duration: 6 weekly appointments of 90 min each); control intervention: waiting group
Official title: A Randomized, Controlled Trial to Increase Self-compassion and Decrease Caregiving Fatigue in Group Leaders of a Support Group for Women After Cancer (GLOW) - an Adaption of the Mindful Self-Compassion Program for Healthcare Communities
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
64
Start Date
2024-07-31
Completion Date
2026-05-01
Last Updated
2025-04-22
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Self-compassion training
Online group intervention: led by a certified mindfulness teacher for mindful self-compassion and additional qualification in self-compassion in healthcare communities (duration: 6 weekly appointments of 90 min each);
Locations (1)
Comprehensive Cancer Center Würzburg
Würzburg, Bavaria, Germany