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A randomized controlled trial of the online OurRelationship program with varying levels of coach support

Online programs that reduce relationship distress fill a critical need; however, their scalability is limited by their reliance on coach calls. To determine the effectiveness of the online OurRelationship program with varying levels of coach support, we conducted a comparative effectiveness trial wi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Le, Yunying, Roddy, McKenzie K., Rothman, Karen, Salivar, Emily Georgia, Guttman, Shayna, Doss, Brian D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10477807/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37674656
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2023.100661
Descripción
Sumario:Online programs that reduce relationship distress fill a critical need; however, their scalability is limited by their reliance on coach calls. To determine the effectiveness of the online OurRelationship program with varying levels of coach support, we conducted a comparative effectiveness trial with 740 low-income couples in the United States. Couples were randomly assigned to full-coach (n(couples) = 226; program as originally designed), automated-coach (n(couples) = 145; as a stand-alone program with tailored automated emails only), contingent-coach (n(couples) = 145; as an adaptive program where tailored automated emails are followed by more coaching if couples did not meet progress milestones), or a waitlist control condition (n(couples) = 224). All analyses were conducted within a Bayesian framework. Completion rates were comparable across conditions (full-coach: 65 %, automated-coach: 59 %, contingent-coach: 54 %). All intervention couples reported reliable pre-post gains in relationship satisfaction compared to waitlist control couples (d(full) = 0.46, d(contingent) = 0.47, and d(automated) = 0.40) with no reliable differences across intervention conditions. Over four-month follow-up, couples in full- and contingent-coach conditions maintained gains in relationship satisfaction and couples in the automated-coach condition continued to improve. Given the comparable completion rates and minimal differences in effect sizes across intervention conditions, all three coaching models appear viable; therefore, the choice of model can vary depending on available resources as well as couple or stakeholder preferences. This study was preregistered (ClinicalTrials.govNCT03568565).