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'Thriving With Bipolar Disorder': Co-design and Pilot Evaluation of a Peer-Delivered, Quality of Life Focused Group Psychoeducation Program
Self-management strategies can be used by individuals with bipolar disorder (BD) to cope with symptoms and improve quality of life (QoL). Peer-facilitated education programs have the potential to diversify delivery of self-management information by capitalizing on the expertise of individuals who live well with BD. We have co-designed a novel, peer-facilitated, QoL-focused, group education program for people living with BD. This project will involve administration of the program and an evaluation of the feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of this program for self-management of BD.
Background and Purpose: Peer support (where individuals with shared lived experience of a mental health condition provide each other with informational, emotional, and social support) may be an acceptable way to disseminate information on self-management strategies, capitalizing on the expertise and knowledge of people who live well with BD. Peer-facilitated group psychoeducation includes the benefits of evidence-based self-management information and tools, with the added advantage of providing role models for recovery and modelling of self-management skills. Unfortunately, there is a dearth of BD-specific peer-facilitated self-management psychoeducation programs, and corresponding evaluations of their efficacy. To capitalize on the potential of peer support to enhance the delivery of BD self-management information, content from two, web-based, self-directed psychoeducational interventions was adapted to create a peer-facilitated psychoeducation program using a community-based participatory research (CBPR) framework. The resulting program contains eight, weekly, two-hour sessions. Each session focuses on a topic related to QoL in BD (including Mood, Sleep, Physical Health, Relationships, Money, Self-esteem, and Independence), and contains a combination of education, opportunities for peer-to-peer knowledge exchange, and activities that facilitate practice of self-management strategies. A facilitator and attendee manual have been created for use in this program. Methods: The project will be implemented across two phases: In the first phase, which we have already completed, we have applied CBPR principles to develop a peer-facilitated, QoL-focused group psychoeducation program for individuals with BD. The resulting program, entitled 'Thriving with bipolar disorder' will be delivered in eight, weekly, two-hour sessions that will be co-facilitated by two peer facilitators with lived experience of BD. In the second phase, we will conduct a pilot evaluation of the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of the program. The program will be delivered through Hope+Me, an Ontario-based charity that supports people living with mood and anxiety disorders through education, advocacy, training, and support services. Four peer facilitators will be recruited through Hope+Me and will attend a \~5.5 hour training session prior to commencing the program. We will aim to recruit 32-40 program participants (8-10 per group) given previous research summarizing the ideal group size. The evaluation will be conducted as a single-arm, uncontrolled, pilot feasibility trial. An explanatory sequential mixed-methods design will be used. The following data will be collected: * Participants will provide baseline demographic and clinical information in a survey as part of their consent. * Participants will complete surveys for efficacy measures at baseline, immediately after completing the program and 1 month after completing the program. * Program feedback will be collected from participants immediately after completing the program through a Qualtrics survey. * Peer facilitators will complete a brief, post-session Qualtrics survey each week, recording attendance, fidelity, and session feedback. At the end of the intervention period, a subset of consenting participants (\~n=12) and peer facilitators (\~n=4) will be invited to participate in a one-hour qualitative individual interview over Zoom. Study Population: Four peer facilitators will be recruited through Hope+Me. We hope to recruit \~fourty program participants. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are specified in the 'Eligibility' section.
Age
18 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Start Date
June 1, 2025
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2025
Completion Date
December 1, 2025
Last Updated
June 17, 2025
44
ESTIMATED participants
Peer Delivered Psychoeducation Program
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
University of British Columbia
Collaborators
NCT07404085
NCT07295652
Data Source & Attribution
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