| Literature DB >> 24231458 |
Dawn Carnes1, Kate Homer, Martin Underwood, Tamar Pincus, Anisur Rahman, Stephanie J C Taylor.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To devise and test a self-management course for chronic pain patients based on evidence and underpinned by theory using the Medical Research Council (MRC) framework for developing complex interventions.Entities:
Keywords: PAIN MANAGEMENT; PRIMARY CARE
Year: 2013 PMID: 24231458 PMCID: PMC3831098 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003534
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Key findings and subsequent recommendations for course design
| Key finding from phases I and II | How this finding influenced course design (influences on main trial shown in brackets) |
|---|---|
| Group delivery appears to be effective (SR1) | Group intervention |
| Most evidence to support professional tutors (SR1) | Groups to be led by a combination of a lay and a professional tutor |
| Medical and community settings associated with effective courses (SR1) | Courses to be held in convenient community or health centre settings |
| Courses longer than 8 weeks were no more effective than courses under 8 weeks (SR1) | Shorter duration course |
| SM Interventions with psychological components were more effective than usual care (SR1) | Principal component of new intervention to be psychological |
| Little evidence to support mind body therapy components (SR1) | Relaxation to be control intervention in main trial. Relaxation was included because participants liked it and to match exposure with the control (QS) |
| Increasing self-efficacy may mediate intervention (SR2) | Course should aim to promote self-efficacy |
| Increasing physical activity may mediate intervention (SR2) | We decided against a large physical activity component in the course but include taster activities (possible hobbies) |
| Depression at baseline may be a predictor for poorer outcomes (SR2) | Course covers depression and encourages people who feel they may be depressed to discuss this with their doctor |
| Concerns of attendees about what happens after the course is completed (QS) | Follow-up session at 2 weeks |
| Reduction in activities common in chronic MSK pain patients (QS) | Inclusion of “taster” activity sessions in the course |
| Isolation common in chronic MSK pain patients (QS) | Have plenty of time for socialising |
| Adult educationalists advised that to be interesting and effective the course should employ multiple media and modalities, be delivered in 20-min bites and encourage experiential learning | Inclusion of role play, filmed material, small group exercises, exercises for pairs, active listening exercises, brainstorming, etc |
| Attrition from self-management courses running over 6–8 weeks known to be a problem | Course run over 3 days in a single week |
| Expert professional input may be useful or appealing to participants | Expert professional input delivered by DVD for economy |
| Reproducibility and fidelity of the intervention | Development of a course manual and training package |
MSK, musculoskeletal; QS, qualitative study; SR1, systematic review about components and characteristics of courses; SR2, systematic review about predictors, mediators and moderators of patient outcomes on courses.
Qualitative interview study: needs and expectations important to participants
GP, general practitioner.
Figure 1Model of relationship between theory and intervention development.
Summary baseline data describing the population recruited (mean (SD))
| Data | Pain intensity Scale | EQ5d | PSEQ | HADS | HADS | CPAQ | HEIQ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| B'line (n=43) | 6.7 (2.1) | 0.23 (0.4) | 22.5 (12.7) | 11.3 (4.1) | 9.4 (3.8) | 46.7 (17.3) | 12.8 (3.1) |
| F-U (n=25) | 6.3 (2.2) | 0.31 (0.4) | 30.2 (13.1) | 10.2 (3.8) | 8.8 (4.1) | 54.1 (18.02) | 13.1 (3.5) |
Numerical rating scale pain: 0–10=worst pain imaginable, Euroqol—Quality of life indicator (EQ5D), UK norm healthy males/females 40–49 years 0.89/0.87 and 50–59 years 0.8/0.82 (0 death).27 Pain self-efficacy questionnaire (PSEQ) scale: 0–60=completely confident,28 hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS), scale: 0–7 ‘normal’, 8–10 borderline, 11–21 ‘abnormal’.29 Chronic pain and acceptance questionnaire scale (CPAQ): 120–0=not coping at all,30 Health education involvement questionnaire (HEIQ) Higher scores indicate a better social life.31
Theories, therapies and cognitive and behavioural techniques influencing the design of the course
| Underlying theories and therapies | Influence on course design | Cognitive and behavioural change techniques used throughout the course as determined by the groups and the facilitators |
|---|---|---|
| Whole course | Plan social support/social change | |
| Pain information | ||
| The pain cycle, goal setting and action planning | ||
| Attention control and distraction | ||
| Group work/discussion | ||
| Identifying problems, goal setting and action planning | ||
| Relaxation and breathing | ||
| Posture |
GP, general practitioner.
Pilot course overview and final course
| Day | Sessions | Content of sessions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1. Introduction and | Session 1: Introduction |
| Lunch | ||
| Taster activity | Art | |
| 2. Mind, mood and pain | Session 4: Pain, when is it bearable and when is it not? | |
| 3. Movement and posture and relaxation | Session 6: Movement and posture | |
| 2 | 4. Dealing with unhelpful, negative thoughts and barriers to change | Session 8: Reflections from day one |
| Lunch | ||
| Taster activity | Hand massage | |
| 5. Making pain more manageable | Session 11: Barriers to change, challenging unhelpful thoughts. Pros and cons of chronic pain and reframing | |
| 6. Movement and Relaxation | Session 14: Movement and balance | |
| 3 | 7. Communication skills | Session 16: Reflections from day 2 |
| Lunch | Introduce idea of ‘buddying’ (rejected after testing) | |
| Taster activity | Craft (rejected after testing; added volunteering instead) | |
| 9. Movement and relaxation | Session 21: Movement and stretch | |
| 4 | 10. The future | Session 23: Reflections |