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As many as 81.5% of veterans may experience chronic pain, pain that lasts beyond the point of healing and for at least 3 months. It is also particularly prevalent among veterans with traumatic brain injury (TBI) , often accompanied by comorbid conditions. Nearly 90% of veterans with a history of TBI have a psychiatric diagnosis, about 75% have insomnia, and 70% have a pain diagnosis, say researchers from University of Washington and Veterans Administration Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS).
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has been shown to help reduce pain, as well as pain-related disability and distress, but no randomized controlled trials (RCT) have examined CBT’s efficacy for pain after TBI in veterans, the researchers say.
In response, the VAPSHCS researchers have designed an RCT to compare telephone-based CBT with telephone-delivered pain education for veterans with TBI and chronic pain. The single-center 2-group trial will enroll up to 160 veterans with TBI to examine the relative efficacy of the interventions on average pain intensity, pain interference, sleep, depression, and life satisfaction.
The participants will be drawn from VAPSHCS, and can be enrolled via clinician referral, electronic health record review, and self-referral. Outcome variables will be collected pre-, mid-, and posttreatment, and 6 months following randomization.
Both interventions will consist of 8 hour-long phone sessions over approximately 8 to 12 weeks, scheduled at times convenient for the participants. Both interventions will also use a participant treatment workbook, with session-specific content to be discussed during the telephone sessions, and audio-recordings to augment material covered. Clinicians will make brief “booster” calls 2, 6, and 10 weeks after the final treatment session.
The trial is innovative, the researchers say, in that it is tailored to veterans, through relatable examples, and to those with TBI, by reducing content and providing multiple methods of engaging with information, as well as using known strategies to help with recall. If effective, the intervention could be disseminated throughout the VHA system, potentially to other personnel who have difficulty accessing specialty pain care.
The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, protocol NCT01768650.
As many as 81.5% of veterans may experience chronic pain, pain that lasts beyond the point of healing and for at least 3 months. It is also particularly prevalent among veterans with traumatic brain injury (TBI) , often accompanied by comorbid conditions. Nearly 90% of veterans with a history of TBI have a psychiatric diagnosis, about 75% have insomnia, and 70% have a pain diagnosis, say researchers from University of Washington and Veterans Administration Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS).
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has been shown to help reduce pain, as well as pain-related disability and distress, but no randomized controlled trials (RCT) have examined CBT’s efficacy for pain after TBI in veterans, the researchers say.
In response, the VAPSHCS researchers have designed an RCT to compare telephone-based CBT with telephone-delivered pain education for veterans with TBI and chronic pain. The single-center 2-group trial will enroll up to 160 veterans with TBI to examine the relative efficacy of the interventions on average pain intensity, pain interference, sleep, depression, and life satisfaction.
The participants will be drawn from VAPSHCS, and can be enrolled via clinician referral, electronic health record review, and self-referral. Outcome variables will be collected pre-, mid-, and posttreatment, and 6 months following randomization.
Both interventions will consist of 8 hour-long phone sessions over approximately 8 to 12 weeks, scheduled at times convenient for the participants. Both interventions will also use a participant treatment workbook, with session-specific content to be discussed during the telephone sessions, and audio-recordings to augment material covered. Clinicians will make brief “booster” calls 2, 6, and 10 weeks after the final treatment session.
The trial is innovative, the researchers say, in that it is tailored to veterans, through relatable examples, and to those with TBI, by reducing content and providing multiple methods of engaging with information, as well as using known strategies to help with recall. If effective, the intervention could be disseminated throughout the VHA system, potentially to other personnel who have difficulty accessing specialty pain care.
The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, protocol NCT01768650.
As many as 81.5% of veterans may experience chronic pain, pain that lasts beyond the point of healing and for at least 3 months. It is also particularly prevalent among veterans with traumatic brain injury (TBI) , often accompanied by comorbid conditions. Nearly 90% of veterans with a history of TBI have a psychiatric diagnosis, about 75% have insomnia, and 70% have a pain diagnosis, say researchers from University of Washington and Veterans Administration Puget Sound Health Care System (VAPSHCS).
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has been shown to help reduce pain, as well as pain-related disability and distress, but no randomized controlled trials (RCT) have examined CBT’s efficacy for pain after TBI in veterans, the researchers say.
In response, the VAPSHCS researchers have designed an RCT to compare telephone-based CBT with telephone-delivered pain education for veterans with TBI and chronic pain. The single-center 2-group trial will enroll up to 160 veterans with TBI to examine the relative efficacy of the interventions on average pain intensity, pain interference, sleep, depression, and life satisfaction.
The participants will be drawn from VAPSHCS, and can be enrolled via clinician referral, electronic health record review, and self-referral. Outcome variables will be collected pre-, mid-, and posttreatment, and 6 months following randomization.
Both interventions will consist of 8 hour-long phone sessions over approximately 8 to 12 weeks, scheduled at times convenient for the participants. Both interventions will also use a participant treatment workbook, with session-specific content to be discussed during the telephone sessions, and audio-recordings to augment material covered. Clinicians will make brief “booster” calls 2, 6, and 10 weeks after the final treatment session.
The trial is innovative, the researchers say, in that it is tailored to veterans, through relatable examples, and to those with TBI, by reducing content and providing multiple methods of engaging with information, as well as using known strategies to help with recall. If effective, the intervention could be disseminated throughout the VHA system, potentially to other personnel who have difficulty accessing specialty pain care.
The trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, protocol NCT01768650.