Strategies to Improve Well-Being and Diabetes Management

Part of paid clinical trials in Westbrook, Maine.

Sponsor
Elizabeth Scharnetzki
Study ID
NCT06348238
Status
Recruiting

Conditions

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
ALL
Age
18 Years - N/A
Healthy Volunteers
Not accepted

Interventions

  • Self-Affirmation — BEHAVIORAL
    Self-affirmation theory contends that integrity of one's self-concept (self integrity) is essential for navigating daily stressors. When individuals encounter information or contexts that pose a threat to one's self-integrity, we can adopt maladaptive coping strategies to alleviate the discomfort. One strategy for strengthening self-integrity is engage in an explicit process of reinforcing sources of self-worth - self-affirmation. Self affirmation interventions have participants engage in an exercise writing about core personal values (a writing induction). In a writing induction, participants review a list of values and are instructed to choose up to two that are important to them. Participants are then asked to write a few sentences about why their chosen values are important to them and identify times in which these values have helped them navigate challenges.

Study Details

This project aims to implement an adapted self-affirmation intervention among a population of individuals with diabetes to reduce the negative psychosocial impacts of stigma. In a self-affirmation, participants are guiding through a writing exercise writing designed to reinforce sources of self-worth before they encounter or engage in stressful or stigmatizing events. Participants in this study will be asked to complete self-affirmation exercises before their 3-month wellness appointments with their endocrinologists over the course of a year. The main questions the investigators are asking are: * Will self-affirmation reduce feelings of stigmatization? * Will self-affirmation increase self-efficacy and motivation to engage in condition management behaviors. * Will self-affirmation improve blood glucose control. Participants will be randomly assigned to either the intervention condition or a waitlist control condition. Participants in the waitlist control condition will also complete writing exercises but they will be abbreviated (this in the psychological literature is referred to as a "low affirmation condition"). At the end of the study, waitlist control participants will have access to the full exercise should they like to receive it. After each appointment and self-affirmation, participants will complete surveys assessing feelings of stigma and motivation to engage in condition management. All participants will already be using continuous glucose monitors. The investigators will compare both survey responses and continuous glucose data between our conditions to assess the efficacy of the self-affirmation intervention.

Key Dates

Start date
Jul 24, 2024
Status verified
Aug 2025
Primary completion
Mar 28, 2026
Completion
Feb 28, 2027

Study Design

Enrollment
150 participants (estimated)
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
OTHER

Arms

  • Experimental: Self-Affirmation
    Participants review a list of values and are instructed to choose up to two that are important to them. The values listed are intentionally unrelated to the threat-inducing domain so that the exercise broadens participants' focus. Next, participants are asked to write a few sentences about why their chosen values are important to them and identify times in which these values have helped them navigate challenges.
  • Sham Comparator: Waitlist Control
    Participants in the waitlist control condition will also complete writing exercises but they will be abbreviated (this in the psychological literature is referred to as a "low affirmation condition"). At the end of the study, waitlist control participants will have access to the full exercise should they like to receive it.

Primary Outcome Measure

Social Identity Threat Concerns (SITC) Scale - Adapted for Diabetes [ Time Frame: Immediately after each intervention; completed 4 times over the course of a year ]

Central Contacts

Locations (1)

FacilityCityStateZIPSite coordinators
MaineHealth Institute for Research, Center for Interdisciplinary and Population Health ResearchWestbrookMaine04092
Elizabeth Scharnetzki
805-340-9716

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