| Literature DB >> 33788604 |
Amanda Vitale1, Lauren Byma1, Shengnan Sun2, Evan Podolak1, Zhaoyu Wang2, Sharon Alter1, Hanga Galfalvy3, Joseph Geraci1, Erik Langhoff1,2, Heidi Klingbeil1, Rachel Yehuda1,2, Fatemeh Haghighi1,2, Ann Feder1.
Abstract
Objective: Suicide is a major public health problem, specifically among U.S. veterans, who do not consistently engage in mental health services, often citing stigma as a barrier. Complementary and Integrative Health (CIH) interventions are promising alternatives in promoting patient engagement and further, they may play a critical role in transitioning people into mental health care. Toward this goal, the Resilience and Wellness Center (RWC) was developed to break through the stigma barrier by addressing risk factors of suicide through multimodal CIH interventions via cohort design, promoting social connectedness and accountability among participants. Design: This is a program evaluation study at a large urban VA medical center, where assessments were evaluated from pre- to post-program completion to determine the effectiveness of an intensive multimodal CIH 4-week group outpatient intervention for suicide prevention. Outcome measures: Primary outcomes measured included group connectedness, severity of depression and hopelessness symptoms, suicidal ideation, sleep quality, and diet. Secondary outcomes included measures of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), generalized anxiety severity stress/coping skills, pain, and fatigue.Entities:
Keywords: complementary and integrative health; depression; meditation; mind–body; nutrition; sleep; suicide prevention
Year: 2021 PMID: 33788604 PMCID: PMC8035924 DOI: 10.1089/acm.2020.0245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Altern Complement Med ISSN: 1075-5535 Impact factor: 2.579
Description of Complementary and Integrative Health Interventions and Number and Amount of time the Interventions are Delivered
| Interventions | No. of times intervention offered | Total no. of minutes the intervention offered |
|---|---|---|
| Mind–Body | ||
| EFT: Participants learn how to tap on specific acupressure points to relieve stress and uncomfortable physical sensations while identifying problems and core issues. | 4 | 240 |
| Transcendental Meditation: is a consistent practice, found to be effective for reducing stress and stress-related disorders. Participants are taught to enter a state of relaxed awareness of thoughts and physical sensations by continuously thinking the instructor-chosen mantra. Veterans are encouraged to practice outside the course to extend benefits. | 5 | 300 |
| Mindful Awareness: teaches veterans to be aware of their physical and emotional responses and environment in the present moment without judgment. The veterans engage in breath, body, movement, and sound awareness experiences for a duration of 5 min before the start of each day's classes, to help veterans transition into and bring their focus to the daily classes. | 16 | 80 |
| Expressive Arts | ||
| Narrative Therapy: guided by a clinician, members freely write on a given topic or a response to a poem/text, and then share what they have written with the group with the goal of cultivating a larger understanding of group commonalities and generating solutions to problems raised. Narrative Therapy targets at-risk veterans by providing a venue for self expression, interpersonal understanding, sharing, and personal growth. | 4 | 240 |
| Music Therapy: The goal is to increase personal insight into the veteran's inter- and intrapersonal communication and health behaviors with the intention of learning strategies for using music independently to manage anxiety, depression, anger, and chronic pain. It emphasizes a dynamic combination of passive and active interventions, including guided imagery, songwriting, singing/playing familiar music, lyric discussion, and thematic percussion improvisation. | 4 | 240 |
| Exercise and Physical Wellness | ||
| Aerobic Line Dancing: movement-focused dance in which a group of veterans execute choreographed steps at the same time, as demonstrated by the physical therapist instructor. This unique form of exercise combines physical benefits with social engagement, encouraging veterans to not only keep fit but also learn to master a dance and build relationships. | 12 | 720 |
| Many of the participating veterans expressed familiarity with soul line dancing from community and/or family events. | ||
| Yoga: aims at increasing bodily awareness, relieving stress, reducing muscle tension, strain, and inflammation, sharpening attention, and calming the central nervous system. Tailored to the physical capabilities of veteran participants, chair yoga allows participants to get the full mental and physical benefits of yoga with a reduced chance of strain or physical risk. | 4 | 240 |
| Acupuncture: The only one-on-one session provided to the participants. Veterans are evaluated by a certified acupuncturist, who then offers individualized acupuncture treatment for the duration of the program; although its primary focus is on pain, it also targets secondary symptoms of depression, anxiety, poor sleep, and associated quality of life issues. | 4 | 120 |
| Sleep Hygiene | ||
| Sleep Hygiene: teaches the development of healthy sleep habits/spaces at home. Veterans learn about what factors foster and maintain high-quality sleep and about habits that might sabotage the sleep process. It also introduces veterans to options for more focused behavioral treatment interventions (e.g., CBT for insomnia). | 4 | 240 |
| Spirit and Soul | ||
| Spirituality: Based on Viktor Frankl's Meaning Centered Logotherapy and Existential Analysis,[ | 4 | 240 |
| Nutrition | ||
| Nutrition and Cooking: teaches the important role that healthy cooking skills play in promoting resilience and wellness through evidence-based approaches to decrease chronic pain and inflammation and improve mood and energy. Veteran participants try new recipes, improve their basic cooking skills, learn about dietary modifications, and experiment with a variety of ingredients. This multifaceted course is an interactive, dynamic, and personalized cooking experience. Veterans are taught sustainable ways to incorporate these recipes and cooking techniques into their daily meal planning to support healthy lifestyle behaviors. | 8 | 240 |
| Life Skills | ||
| Financial Literacy: included in this is an area of significant stress that focuses on topics such as managing personal budgets and investing, focusing on practical budgeting as a means to independence. | 4 | 240 |
| Interpersonal Effectiveness: teaches assertiveness techniques so participants can ask for their wants while balancing the need for healthy relationships and self-respect. It is grounded in DBT-based protocols and emphasizes the use of coping skills and the setting of healthy boundaries. | 4 | 240 |
CBT, cognitive behavior therapy; DBT, dialectical behavioral therapy; EFT, Emotional Freedom Technique.
Demographics Data Representing 126 Participants in the Program
| Total | SA | SI | Nonsuicide (no SI/SA) | Group comparison, | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 126 | 41 (33%) | 41 (33%) | 44 (35%) | ||
| Age (years) | 55.73 ± 12.45 | 52.54 ± 13.28 | 55.83 ± 12.80 | 58.61 ± 10.77 | 0.1890 |
| Sex | |||||
| Male | 87 (69%) | 27 (66%) | 29 (71%) | 31 (70%) | 0.8646 |
| Female | 39 (31%) | 14 (34%) | 12 (29%) | 13 (30%) | |
| Service connection (yes) | 87 (69%) | 28 (68%) | 34 (83%) | 25 (57%) | 0.0336 |
| Depression (yes) | 50 (40%) | 17 (41%) | 15 (37%) | 18 (41%) | 0.8841 |
| PTSD (yes) | 66 (52%) | 24 (59%) | 23 (56%) | 19 (43%) | 0.3100 |
| Substance use (yes) | 4 (3%) | 2 (5%) | 0 (0%) | 2 (5%) | 0.5455 |
| SMI (yes) | 21 (17%) | 11 (27%) | 8 (20%) | 2 (5%) | 0.0189 |
No significant group differences were observed by age, sex, and diagnosis of PTSD or depression. However, group differences was observed for diagnosis of serious mental illness (SMI, schizophrenia, psychosis or bipolar disorder) and service connection.
SA, suicide attempter; SI, suicide ideator; SMI, serious mental illness.
FIG. 1.Age and sex distribution of RWC program participants across all 15 cohorts with 87 males (in blue) and 39 females (in red), separated by a lifetime history of suicide. The majority of at-risk veterans, 54% with a suicide history (ideation or attempt, SI/SA) are in the 45–64 age group, and secondarily 27% are in the under 45 age group. RWC, Resilience and Wellness Center; SA, suicide attempter; SI, suicide ideator. Color images are available online.
FIG. 2.Mental health outcomes, including depressive symptoms (assessed by PHQ-9 and BDI) and hopelessness (assessed by BHS) shown by group, with ideators (SI), attempters (SA), and those with no suicide history (No SI/SA). Left panels show unwinsorized scores pre- versus post-RWC program completion, where clinically relevant moderate depressive and hopelessness symptoms are demarcated by horizontal lines at 10, 20, and 9 for PHQ-9,[82] BDI,[83] and BHS[84], respectively. Right plots show intraindividual differences in scores [delta = (post − pre)] values. BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BHS, Beck Hopelessness Scale; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire-9. Color images are available online.
RWC Program Outcomes for Mental and General Health Assessments
| N | Total | SA | SI | Nonsuicide (no SI/SA) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | |||||
| PHQ-9 | 109 | −5.88 ± 6.11 ( | −6.85 ± 6.81 ( | −7.51 ± 5.84 ( | −3.43 ± 4.94 ( |
| BDI | 86 | −10.15 ± 9.79 ( | −16.11 ± 11.07 ( | −7.19 ± 7.65 ( | −7.63 ± 8.12 ( |
| BHS | 114 | −2.47 ± 4.11 ( | −3.33 ± 4.61 ( | −2.55 ± 4.46 ( | −1.63 ± 3.07 ( |
| PCL | 68 | −6.15 ± 14.44 ( | −10.02 ± 12.72 ( | −7.72 ± 17.01 (NS) | −2.93 ± 12.96 (NS) |
| BAI Scale | 69 | −4.65 ± 10.23 ( | −7.11 ± 9.72 ( | −6.61 ± 8.16 ( | −1.67 ± 11.49 (NS) |
| PSS | 68 | −4.03 ± 7.87 ( | −5.14 ± 10.35 (NS) | −5.46 ± 7.13 ( | −2.37 ± 7.04 (NS) |
| MoCS Scale | 66 | 6.23 ± 8.85 ( | 11.04 ± 7.35 ( | 7.18 ± 8.82 ( | 3.01 ± 8.51 (NS) |
| DVPRS[ | 70 | −0.50 [1.44] ( | −0.50 [1.38] ( | −0.88 [1.56] ( | −0.25 [2.19] (NS) |
| PSQI | 105 | −0.71 ± 1.87 ( | −0.52 ± 1.80 (NS) | −0.94 ± 2.00 ( | −0.64 ± 1.81 (NS) |
| ESS[ | 65 | [6.00] (NS) | −1.50 [4.75] (NS) | 0.50 [5.00] (NS) | [7.00] (NS) |
| HD | 100 | 2.01 ± 6.95 ( | 1.93 ± 7.06 (NS) | 1.88 ± 6.77 (NS) | 2.19 ± 7.21 (NS) |
Outcome measures with pre vs. post differences are shown as mean delta scores by group, with all p-values reported corrected for multiple testing via Benjamini-Hochberg method.
Non-parametric tests were used for DVPRS and ESS because of the skewed data distribution.
BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BHS, Beck Hopelessness Scale; DVPRS, Defense Veterans Pain Rating Scale; ESS, Epworth Sleepiness Scale; HD, Healthy Diet; IQR, interquartile range; MoCS, Measure of Current Status; NS, not significant; PCL, PTSD Checklist; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire-9; PSQI, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; SD, standard deviation.
Magnitude of Treatment Outcomes and Effect Sizes (Cohen's d)
| Magnitude of treatment effect (Cohen's | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | SA | SI | No SI/SA | |
| PHQ-9 | −0.96 (Large) | −1.01 (Large) | −1.28 (Large) | −0.69 (Medium) |
| BDI | −1.04 (Large) | −1.45 (Large) | −0.94 (Large) | −0.94 (Large) |
| BHS | −0.60 (Medium) | −0.72 (Medium) | −0.57 (Medium) | −0.53 (Medium) |
| PCL | −0.43 (Small) | −0.79 (Medium) | −0.45 (Small) | −0.23 (Small) |
| BAI | −0.45 (Small) | −0.73 (Medium) | −0.81 (Large) | −0.14 (Negligible) |
| PSS | −0.51 (Medium) | −0.50 (Medium) | −0.77 (Medium) | −0.33 (Small) |
| MoCS Scale | 0.70 (Medium) | 1.50 (Large) | 0.81 (Large) | 0.35 (Small) |
| PSQI | −0.38 (Small) | −0.29 (Small) | −0.47 (Small) | −0.36 (Small) |
| HD | 0.29 (Small) | 0.27 (Small) | 0.28 (Small) | 0.30 (Small) |
Magnitude of treatment outcomes and effect sizes (Cohen's d) where values of d, correspond to negligible (−0.2
FIG. 3.Pain outcomes assessed by the DVPRS shown by group, with ideators (SI; n = 24), attempters (SA; n = 16), and those with no suicide history (No SI/SA; n = 30). Left panels show unwinsorized scores pre- versus post-RWC program completion, where clinically relevant moderate pain symptoms are demarcated by horizontal lines at 4 for the DVPRS.[98] Right plots show intraindividual differences in scores [delta = (post − pre)] values. DVPRS, Defense Veterans Pain Rating Scale. Color images are available online.
FIG. 4.Percentage of patients who showed improvement in no-show rates across services comparing 3 months pre- and 3 months post-RWC program completion. (MH, mental health; PC, primary care; SP, specialty services, e.g., dermatology, rehabilitation medicine, cardiology, dental care, etc.). Color images are available online.