Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Recovery in Telling Life Stories
Sponsor: University of Aarhus
Summary
This project tests the Recovery In Telling Life Stories (RETELL) intervention, aimed at supporting personal recovery in people with severe mental illness (SMI). While many of those with SMI experience symptom control, their quality of life often remains low due to social loss, negative self-perceptions, and identity-related challenges not addressed by standard treatments. Through a process of narrative repair, the RETELL intervention helps participants explore the personal consequences of mental illness while supporting the enhancement of narratives that strengthen identity and foster well-being. The intervention is delivered across 8-12 sessions and will be assessed for feasibility of both the intervention and study procedures. We will also explore its preliminary impact on recovery, quality of life, symptoms, functioning, self-stigma, and personality, using a multiple single-case A-B-A design. We expect the intervention and study procedures to show acceptable feasibility. We further hypothesize that participants' scores on recovery and well-being will be low at baseline, improve during the intervention, and remain higher after the intervention ends and at 3-month follow-up. This study will provide a foundation for future randomized controlled trials.
Official title: Recovery in Telling Life Stories (RETELL): Testing a Narrative Identity Intervention for Personal Recovery in Individuals With Severe Mental Illness
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 65 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
20
Start Date
2025-07-21
Completion Date
2027-04-01
Last Updated
2025-08-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Narrative therapy
The intervention is structured around 4 central tasks focusing on different aspects of narrative repair. Task 1: Introduction to life story exploration and building alliance. Task 2: Explore and process the impact of mental illness on identity, externalizing negative narratives, and making sense of emotional responses such as guilt, grief, or shame. Task 3: Identify positive identity conclusions (e.g., strengths, values, skills) from past or current life experiences, and support their integration into the personal narrative. Task 4: Support the imagining of a realistic and hopeful future narrative, grounded in insights of previous sessions. Tasks 1-4 are addressed in a total of 8-12 sessions, depending on the specific user needs. Sessions will have an app. duration of 45-60 mins and will be delivered by the PI who is a trained therapist and psychologist (MSc. Psych.), receiving ongoing supervision. The intervention manual will be made freely available in relation to study publication.
Locations (1)
Aarhus Univerity
Aarhus C, Denmark