There is no known interventional clinical trial evidence for existing support and the reintegration strategy of a peer visitation program following amputation. The Amputee Coalition Peer Visitation Program is the only national and VA recognized program for amputees, however, it has not been rigorously tested for effectiveness. Therefore, the objective of this study is to demonstrate the Amputee Coalition Peer Visitation Program (AC PVP) will improve functional outcomes for Service Members, Veterans, and civilians during amputation rehabilitation.
In the fields of medicine and public health management, navigation and peer visitation programs consider patients as are their own important resources, who should be actively involved in the health care organization and throughout the process of care delivery and rehabilitation. The importance of promoting a more active role of patients in the management of their own health care is recognized by health care experts, managers, and policy makers. Programs that engage patients in their own health care are reported as an important strategy to improve adherence, outcomes, satisfaction toward the health care provider, and reduction of health care costs. The emotional adjustment to an amputation is sometimes the most challenging part. Peer visitation allows the patient to speak directly with another amputee who has shared a similar experience, allowing them to relate feelings and concerns about the loss of a limb to someone who has already endured the process and lives with the condition daily. There is increasing national and international interest in patient education programs. The ultimate anticipated outcome for individuals attending these programs is improvement in quality of life. Patient empowerment, self-efficacy, and self-management have also been found to be key intermediate outcomes of acute amputation rehabilitation, but have been somewhat difficult to operationalize, measure, and subsequently report in terms of patient impact. There is no known interventional clinical trial evidence for existing support and the reintegration strategy of a peer visitation program following amputation. The Amputee Coalition Peer Visitation Program is the only national and VA recognized program for amputees, however, it has not been rigorously tested for effectiveness. Therefore, the objective of this study is to demonstrate the Amputee Coalition Peer Visitation Program (AC PVP) will improve functional outcomes for Service Members, Veterans, and civilians during amputation rehabilitation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
46
The Amputee Coalition's Peer Visitation Program (PVP) trains amputee peer supporters to properly navigate a new or less-experienced amputee through the process of rehabilitation. Peer support plays an important role, following the amputation of a limb, by allowing patients to meet other amputees and discuss lifestyle changes post-amputation. Subjects randomized to the PVP group will receive the intervention (visitation by a Certified Peer Visitor) immediately at amputation. Subjects randomized to the non-PVP group will not receive CPV visits immediately at amputation. Rather, they will receive delayed PVP intervention beginning 60 days after amputation and lasting a total of 60 days (or at 120 days post-amputation).
Function/Quality of Life - PVP Group
The MOS short-form health survey (SF-36) will be used to measure function. The SF-36 measures health status in eight dimensions: physical functioning; role limitations due to physical health problems; bodily pain; general health perceptions; vitality, energy, and fatigue; social functioning; role limitations due to emotional problems; and general mental health covering psychological distress and well-being. Scoring instructions from RAND Health provide guidance regarding scoring for each item in the survey and which items measure the aforementioned items.
Time frame: 60 days post-amputation
Function/Quality of Life -NoPVP group
The MOS short-form health survey (SF-36) will be used to measure function.The SF-36 measures health status in eight dimensions: physical functioning; role limitations due to physical health problems; bodily pain; general health perceptions; vitality, energy, and fatigue; social functioning; role limitations due to emotional problems; and general mental health covering psychological distress and well-being. Scoring instructions from RAND Health provide guidance regarding scoring for each item in the survey and which items measure the aforementioned items.
Time frame: 120 days post-amputation
Depression - PVP group
Depression is a treatable disorder associated commonly with amputation and can impact function and quality of life. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a questionnaire that can be entirely self-administered by the patient and interpreted by clinicians. The PHQ, a freely available instrument, assesses 8 diagnoses divided into threshold disorders and sub-threshold disorders
Time frame: 60 days post-amputation
Depression - NoPVP group
Depression is a treatable disorder associated commonly with amputation and can impact function and quality of life. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a questionnaire that can be entirely self-administered by the patient and interpreted by clinicians. The PHQ, a freely available instrument, assesses 8 diagnoses divided into threshold disorders and sub-threshold disorders
Time frame: 120 days post-amputation
Patient Activation - PVP Group
Patient activation will be measured using the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), which is an outcome measure with strong psychometric properties in chronic illness and is able to detect the level of patient activation towards their care management
Time frame: 60 days post-amputation
Patient Activation - NoPVP Group
Patient activation will be measured using the Patient Activation Measure (PAM), which is an outcome measure with strong psychometric properties in chronic illness and is able to detect the level of patient activation towards their care management
Time frame: 120 days post-amputation
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.