Finding My Way from clinical trial to open access dissemination: comparison of uptake, adherence, and psychosocial outcomes of an online program for cancer-related distress

Purpose Few digital psycho-oncology programs have been adopted into routine practice; how these programs are used after trial completion remains unexplored. To address this, the present study transitioned our evidence-based 6-module CBT-based program, Finding My Way , into open access (OA) after com...

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Veröffentlicht in:Supportive care in cancer 2022-10, Vol.30 (10), p.7935-7942
Hauptverfasser: Beatty, Lisa, Kemp, Emma, Koczwara, Bogda
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose Few digital psycho-oncology programs have been adopted into routine practice; how these programs are used after trial completion remains unexplored. To address this, the present study transitioned our evidence-based 6-module CBT-based program, Finding My Way , into open access (OA) after completion of the RCT, and compared uptake, usage, and psychosocial outcomes to the earlier RCT. Methods Recruitment was passive, via promotion through (1) media and social media releases, (2) public lectures, (3) radio interviews and podcasts, and (4) clinician-initiated referral. Measures included number of enrolled users, number of modules completed, and pre- and optional post-measures of distress and quality of life (QOL). Results Uptake was lower in OA ( n  = 120; 63% of RCT). Usage was markedly lower: 1.5 modules were completed on average (vs 3.7 in RCT), and only 13% completed a ‘therapeutic dose’ of 4 + modules (vs. 50% in RCT). Research attrition was high; n  = 13 completed post-measures. OA users were more sociodemographically and clinically diverse than RCT users, had higher baseline distress (OA M pre  = 36.7, SD = 26.5; RCT M pre  = 26.5, SD = 21.7), and reported larger pre-post reductions than their RCT counterparts (OA M post  = 23.9, SD = 20.7; RCT M post  = 21.2, SD = 21.2). Moderate improvements in mental QOL occurred during OA ( M pre  = 37.3, SD = 12.6; M post  = 44.5, SD = 12.1), broadly replicating RCT findings. Conclusion Findings that OA users were more medically and sociodemographically diverse and distressed at baseline than their RCT counterparts, and — despite having lower usage of the program — achieved larger changes from baseline to post-program, will help to shape future intervention design, tailoring, and dissemination.
ISSN:0941-4355
1433-7339
DOI:10.1007/s00520-022-07205-0