The Feasibility of an Intervention Targeting Sources of Meaning in Cardiac Rehabilitation
NCT07262580 · Status: ENROLLING_BY_INVITATION · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 80
Last updated 2026-01-13
Summary
Being diagnosed with heart disease can be a life-changing experience, often sparking existential questions and concerns about meaning in life. A lack of meaning in life has been found associated with increased emotional distress and decreased quality of life. Health professionals recognize that issues related to personal meaning in life are relevant but rarely address these aspects systematically in cardiac rehabilitation. This may be due to a lack of necessary tools.
The project evaluates a novel, brief and structured intervention that aims to strengthen the experience of meaningfulness and reduce or prevent emotional distress by addressing personal sources of meaning in life among patients attending cardiac rehabilitation and their relatives in Denmark. The intervention is based on the Sources of Meaning Card Method, a method developed by Peter la Cour and Tatjana Schnell to map and explore personal sources of meaning (www.somecam.org). For the current project, the method has been adapted for a cardiac rehabilitation context.
Three intervention formats are examined in a feasibility study in a municipal rehabilitation setting: 1) an individual format for patients in cardiac rehabilitation, 2) a dyadic format including a patient together with a relative, and 3) a group format for patients. Approximately 60 patients and 20 relatives are expected to participate. The study explores (a) participants' experience with and acceptability of the intervention formats; (b) changes in meaningfulness and emotional distress in a pre-post design; (c) recruitment and adherence rate, and (d) acceptability and practicality of the three formats among rehabilitation professionals.
Conditions
- Heart Disease
- Mental Health Outcomes
- Rehabilitation
Interventions
- OTHER
-
Conversation on Sources of Meaning in life with heart disease
The intervention uses the brief and structured Sources of Meaning Card Method (SoMeCaM; www.somecam.org), which has been adapted for use in cardiac rehabilitation. It explores personal sources of meaning in a conversation with one patient in a 1-hour session. It comprises 26 cards each including statements on a particular source of meaning. The patient prioritizes the cards, reflects on them, and identifies possibilities for change. The conversation is facilitated by a professional (trained master students in psychology) and followed up with a phone call approximately 4 weeks after the conversation.
- OTHER
-
Group based session on Sources of Meaning in life with heart disease
The intervention is based on the brief and structured Sources of Meaning Card Method (SoMeCaM; www.somecam.org), which has been adapted for use in groups in a cardiac rehabilitation context. The method uses 26 cards, each representing a specific source of meaning. Approximately 6-10 participants are guided through a process of individually prioritizing the cards, reflecting on them and identifying potential areas for change or development in smaller groups. The group-based format enables mutual sharing and support in reflection and change processes among patients. The workshop is facilitated by a professional (trained master students in psychology) and followed up with individual phone calls with all participants approximately 4 weeks after the conversation.
- OTHER
-
Dyadic Conversation on Sources of Meaning in Life with heart disease
The intervention is based on the brief and structured Sources of Meaning Card Method (SoMeCaM; www.somecam.org), which has been adapted for use in dyads in a cardiac rehabilitation context. The method uses 26 cards, each representing a specific source of meaning. The dyadic format considers both the patient's and the relative's individual and shared sources of meaning in 1 session, which may enhance understanding for each other's sources of meaning and facilitate their joint daily life. They both prioritize the cards individually, reflect on them and identify possibilities for change through a talk-and-listen approach. The conversation is facilitated by a professional (trained master students in psychology) and followed up with a phone call approximately 4 weeks after the conversation.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Danish Heart Foundation
collaborator OTHER -
Odense Municipality, Denmark
collaborator UNKNOWN -
University of Southern Denmark
lead OTHER
Study Design
- Allocation
- NON_RANDOMIZED
- Purpose
- SUPPORTIVE_CARE
- Masking
- NONE
- Model
- PARALLEL
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 18 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2025-11-20
- Primary Completion
- 2026-12-31
- Completion
- 2027-02-28
Countries
- Denmark
Study Locations
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