The purpose of this study is to determine whether a telephone-based self-monitoring and skills review program with personalized therapist feedback following group CST for chronic pain can reduce and prevent relapse of the pain, physical disability, and psychological distress experienced by patients with chronic pain of the muscles and bone.
IVR (Interactive Voice Response) is a computer-based, automated telephone system that enables callers to respond to a recorded voice via the telephone keypad. Using this technology, therapeutic IVR (TIVR) was developed as a tool for providing maintenance treatment following group cognitive-behavioral coping skills training (CST), a widely-used behavioral treatment for chronic pain. TIVR has four components: * an automated daily questionnaire for self-monitoring * a review of coping skills * guided behavioral rehearsals of CST coping skills * personalized monthly feedback messages recorded onto TIVR by the therapist All four components can be accessed remotely by patients via any touch-tone phone. In a small pilot study, people with severe, chronic musculoskeletal pain received 11 weeks of either CST alone or CST with TIVR access and therapist feedback. Those who used TIVR had better pain outcomes than those who did not. This study will compare the effectiveness of TIVR with or without therapist feedback to a control group not using TIVR at all. To be eligible for this study, participants must have just completed an 11-week course of CST through the University of Vermont College of Medicine's MindBody Medicine Clinic. At study entry, participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups. Group 1 is a control group that will not receive any intervention through this study. Group 2 participants will receive full access to TIVR and will get a minimal monthly message from their therapist, who will not use the participant's daily questionnaire data. Group 3 participants will receive full access to TIVR and will get personalized monthly messages from their therapist based on the participant's daily questionnaire data. Messages for participants will include any trends the therapist has noted in a participant's stress, sleep, mood, pain levels, coping, and activity, as reported through TIVR. All study participants may continue to receive treatment from their regular physician or take part in other pain management techniques during this study, but such treatment will not be provided through this study. Upon completing the 11 weeks of CST, all participants will be asked to complete a packet of questionnaires about their chronic pain. At the start of this study, participants in Groups 2 and 3 will have a 30-minute training session on how to use and access TIVR. At Months 4, 8, and 12, participants from all three groups will have follow-up interviews and will complete additional questionnaires.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
158
Therapeutic Interactive Voice Response as a daily self monitoring and relapse prevention tool with didactic reviews and practices of recorded skills and monthly feedback based on daily calls
University of Vermont College of Medicine - MindBody Medicine Clinic
Burlington, Vermont, United States
Total pain experience and physical and social disability (as measured by the TOPS)
Time frame: 12 months
Pain level (as measured by the McGill Pain Questionnaire)
Time frame: 12 months
Catastrophizing and perceptions of control (as measured by the Coping Strategies Questionnaire)
Time frame: 12 months
Utilization of telephone system components during the study
Time frame: daily for 6 months
Daily ratings of mood, pain, and coping use (measured by the TIVR Daily Questionnaire)
Time frame: daily for 6 months
General measure of depressive symptoms (measured by the Beck Depression Inventory)
Time frame: 12 months
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