Using a novel gameplay intervention to target intrusive memories after work-related trauma: iterative qualitative analysis of intensive care unit staff experiences
Using a novel gameplay intervention to target intrusive memories after work-related trauma: iterative qualitative analysis of intensive care unit staff experiences
Background: many intensive care unit (ICU) staff experience intrusive memories following work-related traumatic events, which can lead to long-term mental health outcomes and impact work functioning. There is a need for interventions that target intrusive memories in this population; however, factors such as mental health stigma and difficulty in fitting interventions into busy schedules can pose barriers. The Brief Gameplay Intervention For National Health Service Intensive Care Unit Staff Affected By COVID-19 Trauma (GAINS) study tested a brief, digital imagery-competing task intervention (including computer gameplay) with the aim of reducing the recurrence of intrusive memories, which holds promise for overcoming some of these barriers.
Objective:
This substudy aims to explore barriers and facilitators to the uptake and practical use of the intervention by ICU staff, along with its acceptability, and iteratively explore the impact of intervention optimizations to further refine the intervention.
Methods: the GAINS study is a randomized controlled trial comparing access to a brief digital imagery-competing task intervention for 4 weeks with usual care followed by delayed access to the intervention. The participants were ICU staff who worked during the COVID-19 pandemic and experienced intrusive memories. All participants were sent a questionnaire at 4 weeks to gather data about intervention acceptability. Nested within the randomized controlled trial, a subset of 16 participants was interviewed, and data were analyzed using thematic analysis drawing from a framework approach.
Results: both quantitative and qualitative data indicated high acceptability of the intervention. Intervention use data show that, on average, staff were able to target approximately 73% (3.64/4.88) of their intrusive memories and engaged with the Tetris component for the full 20 minutes per session. Overall, on the acceptability questionnaire, staff found the intervention easy to use, helpful, and highly acceptable. The interviews generated four themes: approach to the intervention, positives of the intervention, negatives of the intervention, and improvements and optimizations. Findings highlighted barriers that ICU staff experienced: stigma, feeling weak for seeking help, not wanting colleagues to know they were struggling, and skepticism. However, they provided suggestions on how barriers could be overcome and discussed the advantages of the intervention when compared with other treatments. Although participants described many positive aspects of the intervention, such as being easy to use, enjoyable, and leading to a reduction in the frequency or intensity of intrusive memories, they also raised practical issues for implementation.
Conclusions: the intervention has the potential to overcome stigma and reduce the frequency of intrusive memories after traumatic events among ICU staff. Further refinement is needed to improve the adoption and reach of this intervention. A limitation is that we could not interview the National Health Service staff who were unable or unwilling to take part in the trial.
Patel, Priya
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Brown, Susan
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Guo, Boliang
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Holmes, Emily A.
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Iyadurai, Lalitha
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Kingslake, Jonathan
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Highfield, Julie
fce223d1-1632-4ff0-b1f4-b73e91c719c9
Morriss, Richard
fb48ce6f-f557-4e5d-a309-5eb7f6ee6c2e
29 February 2024
Patel, Priya
fcb9e25b-a68e-46fd-b637-359e9378488e
Brown, Susan
4c494398-8824-46bd-aff6-5fb8909bbc07
Guo, Boliang
7d5abf87-3b9a-46e8-a028-814f2e7a5324
Holmes, Emily A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Iyadurai, Lalitha
daf0f3ec-9224-4565-b16d-c93b1ec23293
Kingslake, Jonathan
97f6013b-8fe2-41d6-905c-2c556703a90f
Highfield, Julie
fce223d1-1632-4ff0-b1f4-b73e91c719c9
Morriss, Richard
fb48ce6f-f557-4e5d-a309-5eb7f6ee6c2e
Patel, Priya, Brown, Susan, Guo, Boliang, Holmes, Emily A., Iyadurai, Lalitha, Kingslake, Jonathan, Highfield, Julie and Morriss, Richard
(2024)
Using a novel gameplay intervention to target intrusive memories after work-related trauma: iterative qualitative analysis of intensive care unit staff experiences.
JMIR Formative Research, 8, [e47458].
(doi:10.2196/47458).
Abstract
Background: many intensive care unit (ICU) staff experience intrusive memories following work-related traumatic events, which can lead to long-term mental health outcomes and impact work functioning. There is a need for interventions that target intrusive memories in this population; however, factors such as mental health stigma and difficulty in fitting interventions into busy schedules can pose barriers. The Brief Gameplay Intervention For National Health Service Intensive Care Unit Staff Affected By COVID-19 Trauma (GAINS) study tested a brief, digital imagery-competing task intervention (including computer gameplay) with the aim of reducing the recurrence of intrusive memories, which holds promise for overcoming some of these barriers.
Objective:
This substudy aims to explore barriers and facilitators to the uptake and practical use of the intervention by ICU staff, along with its acceptability, and iteratively explore the impact of intervention optimizations to further refine the intervention.
Methods: the GAINS study is a randomized controlled trial comparing access to a brief digital imagery-competing task intervention for 4 weeks with usual care followed by delayed access to the intervention. The participants were ICU staff who worked during the COVID-19 pandemic and experienced intrusive memories. All participants were sent a questionnaire at 4 weeks to gather data about intervention acceptability. Nested within the randomized controlled trial, a subset of 16 participants was interviewed, and data were analyzed using thematic analysis drawing from a framework approach.
Results: both quantitative and qualitative data indicated high acceptability of the intervention. Intervention use data show that, on average, staff were able to target approximately 73% (3.64/4.88) of their intrusive memories and engaged with the Tetris component for the full 20 minutes per session. Overall, on the acceptability questionnaire, staff found the intervention easy to use, helpful, and highly acceptable. The interviews generated four themes: approach to the intervention, positives of the intervention, negatives of the intervention, and improvements and optimizations. Findings highlighted barriers that ICU staff experienced: stigma, feeling weak for seeking help, not wanting colleagues to know they were struggling, and skepticism. However, they provided suggestions on how barriers could be overcome and discussed the advantages of the intervention when compared with other treatments. Although participants described many positive aspects of the intervention, such as being easy to use, enjoyable, and leading to a reduction in the frequency or intensity of intrusive memories, they also raised practical issues for implementation.
Conclusions: the intervention has the potential to overcome stigma and reduce the frequency of intrusive memories after traumatic events among ICU staff. Further refinement is needed to improve the adoption and reach of this intervention. A limitation is that we could not interview the National Health Service staff who were unable or unwilling to take part in the trial.
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formative-2024-1-e47458
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Accepted/In Press date: 20 November 2023
Published date: 29 February 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 508022
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508022
PURE UUID: fee775da-b845-4892-8f64-3916282f006e
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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2026 17:54
Last modified: 17 Jan 2026 03:45
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Contributors
Author:
Priya Patel
Author:
Susan Brown
Author:
Boliang Guo
Author:
Emily A. Holmes
Author:
Lalitha Iyadurai
Author:
Jonathan Kingslake
Author:
Julie Highfield
Author:
Richard Morriss
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