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RECRUITING
NCT07282158
NA

Adapted Helping Ovarian Cancer Patients Cope Intervention to Address Burnout for Gynecologic Oncology Clinicians

Sponsor: Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This clinical trial tests an adapted version of the Helping Ovarian Cancer Patients Cope (HOPE) intervention to address burnout among gynecologic oncology clinicians. Stress and burnout among gynecologic oncology clinicians can have far-reaching impacts not only on physicians at the individual level (e.g., distress, mental illness) but also at the professional (e.g., worse patient outcomes, increased errors) and societal levels (fewer physicians in this specialty, more system strain). The original Helping Ovarian Cancer Patients Cope (HOPE) is a workshop to promote hope among patients with ovarian cancer through creating positive narratives using the hope theory and social-cognitive theory. The adapted intervention for clinicals (HOPE-C) will use the same concepts but tailored to clinician experiences by fostering peer support and retelling their challenging stories and may address burnout for gynecologic oncology clinicians.

Official title: Adaptation of Helping Ovarian Cancer Patients Cope (HOPE) for Clinician Burnout (HOPE-C)

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

25

Start Date

2026-05-01

Completion Date

2029-12-31

Last Updated

2026-04-08

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Behavioral Intervention

Complete HOPE-C sessions

OTHER

Interview

Complete interview

OTHER

Survey Administration

Ancillary studies

Locations (1)

Fred Hutch/University of Washington Cancer Consortium

Seattle, Washington, United States