Co-designing a low-intensity psychological therapy for fear of recurrence in psychosis using translational learning from fear of recurrence in oncology : protocol for intervention development for future testing in a feasibility study

Allan, Stephanie and Sinclair, Fiona and Correia, Marta and Fragkandrea-Nixon, Ioanna and Phiri, Alie and Jones, Gareth and Thomson, David and Yanga, Francis and Brown, George and McCann, Mark and Simpson, Sharon Anne and Evans, Jonathan and Robb, Katie and Gumley, Andrew (2024) Co-designing a low-intensity psychological therapy for fear of recurrence in psychosis using translational learning from fear of recurrence in oncology : protocol for intervention development for future testing in a feasibility study. BMJ open, 14 (12). e090566. ISSN 2044-6055 (https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2024-090566)

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Abstract

Introduction: Fear of recurrence is a transdiagnostic problem experienced by people with psychosis, which is associated with anxiety, depression and risk of future relapse events. Despite this, there is a lack of available psychological interventions for fear of recurrence, and psychological therapies for schizophrenia are often poorly implemented in general. However, low-intensity psychological therapy is available for people who experience fear of recurrence in the context of cancer, which means there is an opportunity to learn what has worked in a well-implemented psychological therapy to see if any learning can be adapted for schizophrenia care. This article describes the design, methods and expected data collection of development, acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary outcome signals for a coproduced low-intensity psychological intervention targeting fear of relapse in people with schizophrenia (INDIGO), which aims to develop an acceptable psychological intervention for fear of recurrence. Methods and analysis: INDIGO will use a mixed-methods approach to co-design and deliver a model and treatment pathway for a psychological intervention for people diagnosed with schizophrenia who experience fear of recurrence. The study will consist of four stages. First, in-depth interviews with mental health staff and people diagnosed with schizophrenia (with a further social network mapping task for patient participants only) to develop the intervention. Second, in-depth interviews with people who have accessed the Glasgow Fear of Recurrence service and oncology staff will be conducted to inform further development of the intervention. Third, co-design workshops will be held with people diagnosed with schizophrenia and mental health staff to co-design intervention content and the treatment pathway. Finally, people diagnosed with schizophrenia will be presented with an intervention prototype and invited to complete ‘think-aloud’ interviews to gather further feedback so adaptations can be implemented. Ethics and dissemination: The INDIGO study received ethical approval from East Midlands—Nottingham 2 Research Ethics Committee (24/EM/0124). The study received independent peer review prior to funding. This co-design study is expected to lead to a future feasibility study and, if indicated, a randomised controlled trial.

ORCID iDs

Allan, Stephanie, Sinclair, Fiona, Correia, Marta, Fragkandrea-Nixon, Ioanna ORCID logoORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3223-0700, Phiri, Alie, Jones, Gareth, Thomson, David, Yanga, Francis, Brown, George, McCann, Mark, Simpson, Sharon Anne, Evans, Jonathan, Robb, Katie and Gumley, Andrew;