The purpose of this randomized study is to compare the effects of nurse caring (3 nurse counseling sessions), self-caring (3 home-delivered videotapes and journals), combined caring (1 nurse counseling plus 3 videotapes and journals) and no intervention (control) on the emotional healing, integration of loss, and couple well-being of women and their partners (husbands or male mates) in the first year after miscarrying. A recent IoM \[41\] report claims one of the greatest obstacles to determining effectiveness of home-based interventions is getting clients to complete treatment protocols, thus the combined-caring group is included to determine if nurse endorsement of the videotape/journal modules enhances adherence and increases the efficacy of the self-caring protocol. All intervention materials are based on Swanson's middle-range caring theory \[109,112\] and Meaning of Miscarriage Model \[116\]. Both frameworks were phenomenologically derived and subsequently applied and tested in the Miscarriage Caring Project (MCP), a randomized trial of the effects of 3 caring-based nurse counseling sessions on women's emotional well-being and integration of loss in the first year after miscarriage \[115\]. The MCP is the only randomized post-miscarriage intervention that has led to significant positive mental health outcomes for women.
There are no published studies of interventions that have led to significant outcomes for men or couples post miscarriage. Yet, the PI's experience counseling couples groups (also based on the caring theory and miscarriage model) has provided consistent, albeit anecdotal, evidence that including partners helps couples to reach out to each other, integrate miscarriage into their lives, and resolve grieving. Therefore, this project focuses on women and their partners (spouses or male mates in a committed relationship). An additional goal is to determine if an innovative, easily delivered, low-cost video/journal intervention is as effective as interpersonal counseling in assisting women and their partners to emotionally heal, integrate loss, and experience couple well being in the first year after miscarriage.
The procedural aims are to:
1. Develop an empirically derived self-caring intervention for couples who have miscarried. This home-delivered intervention will be a series of three modules consisting of broadcast quality videotapes ("Miscarriage: Caring and Healing") and journal assignments. (drafts are in Appendices B.1 to B.3.)
2. Train nurses to deliver a three session caring-based counseling intervention to couples.
3. Randomly assign couples who recently miscarried to one of four groups: group I (nurse caring) will receive three counseling sessions. Couples in group II (combined-caring) will receive one counseling session plus three self-caring videotape / journal modules; Group III (self-caring) will receive the three self-caring videotape / journal modules. Group IV (control) will receive no intervention.
There are four hypothesis-testing specific aims and one exploratory research aim:
1. Compared to controls, women and their partners who receive nurse, combined, or self-caring will report significantly more emotional healing, stronger integration of loss, and greater couple well-being in the first year subsequent to miscarriage.
2. Comparing the three modes of delivering caring (nurse, combined, and self), for women and their partners, there will be no differences in emotional healing, integration of loss, and couple well-being
3. Comparing self-caring to combined-caring, for women and their partners, within and across intervention times, there will be no differences in intervention adherence and / or evaluation scores.
4. Comparing the nurse-caring group to the combined-caring group, for women and their partners, there will be no differences in ratings of counselor empathy and caring at the first counseling session.
5. Determine associations amongst background variables, intervention monitoring scores, intervening variables, emotional healing, integration of loss, and couple well-being for women and their partners at 1 week, 6 weeks, 4 months and 1 year post-enrollment.