| Literature DB >> 31094345 |
Jolie N Haun1, Lisa M Ballistrea1, Christine Melillo1, Maisha Standifer1, Kevin Kip1,2, Jacquelyn Paykel3, Jennifer L Murphy4, Carol E Fletcher5, Allison Mitchinson5, Leila Kozak6,7,8, Stephanie L Taylor9,10, Shirley M Glynn11, Matthew Bair12,13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complementary and integrative health (CIH) is a viable solution to PTSD and chronic pain. Many veterans believe CIH can be performed only by licensed professionals in a health care setting. Health information technology can bring effective CIH to veterans and their partners.Entities:
Keywords: PTSD; complementary and integrative health; health information technology; implementation; pain; veteran
Year: 2019 PMID: 31094345 PMCID: PMC6535978 DOI: 10.2196/13666
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1Conceptual model. CIH: complementary and integrative health; H: hypothesis; MR: Mission Reconnect; PTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder; RQ: research question.
Figure 2Study flow chart. and abbreviation CPRS: Computerized Patient Record System; MR: Mission Reconnect; VSSC: Veterans Health Administration Support Service Center Capital Assets.
Veteran and partner measures and psychometric properties.
| Variable, construct | Measure | Description | Minutes | Time point | |
| Demographics | Participant survey | 15 items assessing age, gender, ethnicity/race, education, income levels, religion, marital status, relationship length, military service/status/grade, deployments, computer/internet use | 5 | Baseline | |
| Other treatments | Concurrent treatments | 2 items asking veterans to report concurrent pain and PTSDa treatment(s) and CIHb modalities to account for dual intervention effects | 1 | Baseline, Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| MRc program utilization (treatment and control group) | Utilization survey | 11 items assessing frequency of use of the MR mind/body and massage practices | 3 | Weeks 1-8; Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Quality of life | Self-Assessment of Change [ | 16-item word-pairing scale assessing a variety of shifts in well-being across a broad range of therapeutic modalities and conditions | 5 | Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Quality of life | Quality of Life Short Form-12 [ | 12 items assessing quality of life using physical status and mental health distress | 3 | Baseline, Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Pain | Defense and Veterans Pain Rating Scale [ | Pain Numeric Rating Scale [ | 3 | ||
| Pain Outcomes Questionnaire - Short Form VAd [ | 19 items assessing pain-related domains, including pain intensity, interference with activities and mobility, negative affect, vitality, pain-related fear; and improbable pain-related symptoms | 5 | |||
| TBIe exposure | OHIOf TBI Exposure Screen [ | 8 items designed to elicit self- or proxy-reports of TBI occurring over a person’s lifetime; can provide measures of extent of exposure to TBI including current injury | 5 | Baseline | |
| Pain | Single-item scale | One item assessing pain using a 0-5–point Likert-type scale | 1 | Baseline, Weeks 1-8; Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Stress and tension | Single-item scale | Two items assessing stress and tension using a 0-5–point Likert-type scale | 1 | ||
| PTSD & related psychological symptoms | PTSD Checklist [ | 20-item measure of the | 4 | Baseline, Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Depression: Beck Depression Inventory [ | 21 items, a widely used instrument for measuring depression; respondents asked to rate their symptoms and attitudes using a 4-point scale | 5 | |||
| Stress: Perceived Stress Scale [ | 10 Likert-scaled items, validated and widely used, to determine perceived stress levels | 3 | |||
| Sleep Quality: Pittsburg Sleep Quality Index [ | 19 self-rated questions from which 7 component scores are calculated and summed into a global score to assess sleep quality in the past month | 4 | |||
| Relationship satisfaction | Revised Dyadic Adjustment Scale [ | 14-item Likert-scaled instrument is reliable and valid and contains subscales for dyadic consensus, dyadic satisfaction, and dyadic cohesion. | 3 | Baseline, Months 1, 2, 4 | |
| Compassion | Compassion for self and others scales [ | 26-item Self-Compassion Scale and 21-item Compassion for Others measures, using 5-point Likert scale | 5 | ||
| Program satisfaction (treatment only) | MR program satisfaction items | Eleven 10-point Likert-type items assessing satisfaction using MR components, whether they would recommend MR, and massage satisfaction | 1 | Weeks 1-8; Months 1, 2, 4 | |
aPTSD: posttraumatic stress disorder.
bCIH: complementary and integrative health.
cMR: Mission Reconnect
dVA: Veterans Affairs
eTBI: traumatic brain injury.
fOHIO: Ohio State University TBI Identification Method.
Gantt chart of study benchmarks.
| Project activity | Year 1 (2019-2020) | Year 2 (2020-2021) | Year 3 (2021-2022) | Year 4 (2022-2023) | ||||||||||||
| Q1 Nov ’18 | Q2 Feb ’19 | Q3 May | Q4 Aug | Q1 Nov | Q2 Feb ’20 | Q3 May | Q4 Aug | Q1 Nov | Q2 Feb ’21 | Q3 May | Q4 Aug | Q1 Nov | Q2 Feb ’22 | Q3 May | Q4 Aug | |
| Start-up | Xa | |||||||||||||||
| Recruitment screening and randomization, Qualtrics development and validation | X | |||||||||||||||
| Recruitment: 3-4 dyads/month per site | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||||||||
| Primary data collection | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | |||||||
| Conduct interviews | X | X | X | X | ||||||||||||
| Interview transcription | X | X | X | X | X | |||||||||||
| Interview data analysis | X | X | X | X | X | |||||||||||
| Prepare and stage primary data | X | X | X | |||||||||||||
| Primary data analysis | X | X | ||||||||||||||
| Data interpretation and triangulation | X | X | X | |||||||||||||
| Finalize data reports/manuscripts | X | X | ||||||||||||||
| Develop materials for dissemination | X | X | ||||||||||||||
| Prepare/submit subsequent proposal | X | X | ||||||||||||||
| Disseminate materials to audiences | X | X | ||||||||||||||
aX: denotes the activity occurred during this time frame.