Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress

Divorce has long been considered one of the most pervading stressful life events and has consistently been associated with high stress levels and subsequent poorer mental- and physical health. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the Cooperation after Divorce (CAD) online intervention on percei...

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Main Authors: Ana Cipric, Jenna M. Strizzi, Camilla S. Øveru, Theis Lange, Aleksandar tulhofer, Søren Sander, Simone Gad-Kjeld, Gert M Hald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos de Madrid 2020-04-01
Series:Psychosocial Intervention
Subjects:
rct
Online Access: https://journals.copmadrid.org/pi/art/pi2020a7
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spelling doaj-07c884cbd601437cb5edeb09cde755112020-11-25T02:28:54ZengColegio Oficial de Psicólogos de MadridPsychosocial Intervention1132-05592173-47122020-04-0129211312310.5093/pi2020a711320559Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived StressAna Cipric0Jenna M. Strizzi1Camilla S. Øveru2Theis Lange3Aleksandar tulhofer4Søren Sander5Simone Gad-Kjeld6Gert M Hald7University of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Zagreb, Croatia, University of Zagreb, CroatiaUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen, Denmark, University of Copenhagen, DenmarkDivorce has long been considered one of the most pervading stressful life events and has consistently been associated with high stress levels and subsequent poorer mental- and physical health. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the Cooperation after Divorce (CAD) online intervention on perceived stress immediately following divorce. The study’s design was a one-year longitudinal randomized controlled trial including an intervention group (n = 1,031) and a no-treatment control group (n = 825) with four assessments of perceived stress levels (at baseline and 3, 6 and 12-months post-divorce). The CAD intervention consists of a 17-module online platform designed to support divorcees and their children post-divorce. Data analyses consisted of linear mixed effect modeling and means comparisons. The study found that the intervention significantly accelerated the reduction of perceived stress among recently divorced adults when compared with controls. Further, after one year, stress levels in the intervention group were reduced to normed national stress levels while the mean stress level in the control group remained substantially higher. The results suggest that online interventions may offer long-term public health benefits in reducing stress among newly divorced individuals and speak to potential implications related to the services provided for people undergoing divorce. https://journals.copmadrid.org/pi/art/pi2020a7 self-perceived stressdivorcemarital dissolutionrctdigital intervention
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ana Cipric
Jenna M. Strizzi
Camilla S. Øveru
Theis Lange
Aleksandar tulhofer
Søren Sander
Simone Gad-Kjeld
Gert M Hald
spellingShingle Ana Cipric
Jenna M. Strizzi
Camilla S. Øveru
Theis Lange
Aleksandar tulhofer
Søren Sander
Simone Gad-Kjeld
Gert M Hald
Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
Psychosocial Intervention
self-perceived stress
divorce
marital dissolution
rct
digital intervention
author_facet Ana Cipric
Jenna M. Strizzi
Camilla S. Øveru
Theis Lange
Aleksandar tulhofer
Søren Sander
Simone Gad-Kjeld
Gert M Hald
author_sort Ana Cipric
title Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
title_short Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
title_full Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
title_fullStr Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
title_full_unstemmed Cooperation after Divorce: An RCT Study of the Effects of a Digital Intervention Platform on Self-Perceived Stress
title_sort cooperation after divorce: an rct study of the effects of a digital intervention platform on self-perceived stress
publisher Colegio Oficial de Psicólogos de Madrid
series Psychosocial Intervention
issn 1132-0559
2173-4712
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Divorce has long been considered one of the most pervading stressful life events and has consistently been associated with high stress levels and subsequent poorer mental- and physical health. This study evaluates the effectiveness of the Cooperation after Divorce (CAD) online intervention on perceived stress immediately following divorce. The study’s design was a one-year longitudinal randomized controlled trial including an intervention group (n = 1,031) and a no-treatment control group (n = 825) with four assessments of perceived stress levels (at baseline and 3, 6 and 12-months post-divorce). The CAD intervention consists of a 17-module online platform designed to support divorcees and their children post-divorce. Data analyses consisted of linear mixed effect modeling and means comparisons. The study found that the intervention significantly accelerated the reduction of perceived stress among recently divorced adults when compared with controls. Further, after one year, stress levels in the intervention group were reduced to normed national stress levels while the mean stress level in the control group remained substantially higher. The results suggest that online interventions may offer long-term public health benefits in reducing stress among newly divorced individuals and speak to potential implications related to the services provided for people undergoing divorce.
topic self-perceived stress
divorce
marital dissolution
rct
digital intervention
url https://journals.copmadrid.org/pi/art/pi2020a7
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