Protocol of a randomised controlled multicentre trial investigating the effectiveness and safety of a wilderness programme on the mental and physical well-being of adolescents and young adults affected by cancer: the WAYA-2 study

Miek C. Jong*, Carina Ribe Fernee, Andreas Stenling, E. Anne Lown, Sveinung Berntsen, David E. Victorson, Mats Jong

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Introduction Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) affected by cancer are an understudied group. Effective interventions are needed to support coping with the late effects of cancer, its treatment and to promote quality of life. Nature-based interventions may be promising in support of the self-management and health of AYAs affected by cancer. However, randomised controlled studies (RCTs) on the effectiveness of such interventions are lacking. We performed a first pilot RCT (n=42) that showed that it is feasible and safe to conduct such a study. Here, we propose a full-scale RCT to investigate the effectiveness and safety of a wilderness programme on the mental and physical health of AYAs affected by cancer. Methods and analysis Participants are 150 AYAs affected by cancer, aged 16-39 years, who will be randomised to a wilderness (n=75) or a hotel stay (n=75). The wilderness programme is an 8-day intervention including a 6-day wilderness expedition. This is followed 3 months later by a 4-day intervention including a 2-day basecamp. Activities include hiking, backpacking, kayaking, rock climbing, mindfulness and bush-crafting. The comparison group is an 8-day hotel stay followed by a 4-day hotel stay (interventions include two travel days) at the same hotel after 3 months. Primary outcomes are psychological well-being and nature connectedness up to 1 year after the study start. Secondary outcomes are quality of life, physical activity and safety parameters. Ethics and dissemination The Swedish Ethical Review Authority approved the study protocol on 27 September 2023 (reference: 2023-05247-01). The recruitment started on 19 February 2024 and the first part is planned to end on 31 December 2027. Study results will be disseminated by means of scientific publications, presentations at conferences, popular articles, interviews, chronicles and books. News items will be spread via social media, websites and newsletters.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere087626
JournalBMJ open
Volume14
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 21 2024

Funding

Research grants have been obtained from Ekhagastiftelsen (grant no 2023-29) and Sj\u00F6bergstiftelsen (grant no 2024-01- 04: 10) in Sweden. In-kind financial contributions to the study will be provided for by Mid Sweden University (Sundsvall, Sweden), the National Research Center in Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NAFKAM) (Troms\u00F8, Norway) and the University of Agder (Kristiansand, Norway).

Keywords

  • oncology
  • psychosocial intervention
  • quality of life
  • safety
  • self-management

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Medicine

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