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My Disaster Recovery: a pilot randomized controlled trial of an Internet intervention
Authors:Sarah E. Steinmetz  Sheryl L. Bishop  Lori E. James
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Trauma, Health, and Hazards Center , University of Colorado at Colorado Springs , Colorado Springs , CO , USA;2. Center for Nursing Research and Evaluation, School of Nursing , University of Texas Medical Branch , Galveston , TX , USA;3. Department of Psychology , University of Colorado at Colorado Springs , Colorado Springs , CO , USA
Abstract:
Abstract

This pilot study tested the efficacy of the My Disaster Recovery (MDR) website to decrease negative affect and increase coping self-efficacy. Fifty-six survivors of Hurricane Ike were recruited from a larger study being conducted at the University of Texas Medical Branch at the first anniversary of the storm. Restricted randomization was used to assign participants to the MDR website, an information-only website, or a usual care condition. Group×time interactions indicated that MDR reduced participant worry more than the other conditions. A similar trend was also identified for depression. Both websites were accessed a small to moderate amount and participants reported mixed satisfaction for both websites. Although the effect sizes for worry and depression were in the moderate to large range, small sample size and timing of the intervention qualify the findings. These preliminary findings encourage further evaluation of MDR with a larger, demographically diverse sample and indicate that the MDR website might be helpful in reducing worry and depression.
Keywords:disaster  coping  Internet intervention  posttraumatic stress  randomized controlled trial  coping self-efficacy
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