Stress is important for health. As emergency departments (EDs) are often stressful places, a better understanding of the human stress response is important for understanding how and why patients respond as they do when they come to the ED. Since the investigators cannot take up space in the ED for research, the investigators will instead recruit 20 methamphetamine-using participants who are not currently in treatment and 10 healthy adult matched participants to a simulated ED room in the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) Simulation Center. The investigators will have participants perform a stressor task involving public speaking and a simple arithmetic task. The investigators will see if this experiment can be made to be like being in an actual ED by varying what participants speak about in the task. By doing this, the investigators hope to find out several important things: 1) Is a stressor task feasible and acceptable to participants? 2) What does the stress response -- as measured by cortisol and alpha-amylase -- look like in these participants? 3) Does varying what participants talk about make the experiment seem more like an actual ED? 4) Do participants under stress show even mild symptoms of agitation as measured by clinical scales? If so, how often?
Aim 1: Determine the feasibility and acceptability of an ED-relevant stressor task as compared to a standard social stressor task. The investigators hypothesize that an ED-relevant stressor task will be feasible, as measured by the ability to recruit/randomize/retain participants, and as acceptable to participants as a standard social stressor task. Aim 2: Measure the stress response (alpha-amylase, cortisol, vital signs) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task. The investigators hypothesize that norepinephrine release will be adequately assessed by salivary alpha-amylase and that an ED-relevant stressor task will elicit similar or greater physiological responses as a standard social stress task. Aim 3: Evaluate the ED-representativeness of an ED-relevant stressor task compared to a standard social stressor task. Although both tasks will be performed in a simulated ED room in the UAMS Simulation Center, the investigators hypothesize that an ED-relevant task will be rated as more representative of an actual ED visit. Aim 4: Evaluate ethological ratings of non-verbal behavior thought to indicate assertion and ratings of agitation using rating scales commonly employed in the clinical environment for this purpose. Participants undergoing stress sometimes display symptoms of assertion or agitation, but it is unknown when or how often this occurs. The investigators hypothesize that ethological ratings will be correlated with agitation scale scores and physiological changes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
30
Participants will be asked to respond in detail to three scenarios. This is a standard social stressor task. Participants may be prompted by an experimenter. However, the participant will receive no verbal nor nonverbal feedback.
Participants will be asked to imagine and then describe both feelings and bodily sensations experienced at their most stressful ED visit, in order to help them more fully re-experience the situation. In this regard, the second condition is more similar to stress imagery employed by Sinha et al, which elevated cortisol to a greater degree than a social stressor task. Participants may be prompted by an experimenter. However, the participant will receive no verbal nor nonverbal feedback.
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Little Rock, Arkansas, United States
Determine the feasibility and acceptability of an ED-relevant stressor task as compared to a standard social stressor task.
Measure feasibility and acceptability in the following ways: participant recruitment; the number of participants completing the experiment; and the acceptability ratings of the task after completion. The 9-point acceptability responses will be analyzed by calculating the mean and 95% confidence intervals for each question, then calculating a chi-square goodness of fit test across the 3 ranges of the scores. Answers to open-ended questions about participant experiences will be coded using conventional content analysis, as per Hsieh and Shannon. In this analysis, two research associates separately read through all the participants' qualitative responses and highlight key words which reflect the overall idea of the patient's response. After multiple reviews, 3-5 main categories will be identified which reflect responses of a similar nature. After categorization, a third research associate will make final decisions on the placement of individual responses.
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure the stress response (alpha-amylase) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Compare alpha-amylase in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with stressful imagery).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure the stress response (cortisol) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Compare cortisol levels in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with stressful imagery).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure the stress response (systolic blood pressure) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Compare systolic blood pressure in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with stressful imagery).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure the stress response (diastolic blood pressure) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Compare diastolic blood pressure in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with stressful imagery).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure the stress response (heart rate) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Compare heart rate in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with stressful imagery).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Evaluate the ED-representativeness of an ED-relevant stressor task compared to a standard social stressor task.
Measure ED-representativeness in the following way: the ED-representativeness ratings of the task after completion. Investigators will compare representative ratings on a 9-point scale. The 9-point acceptability responses will be analyzed by calculating the mean and 95% confidence intervals for each question, then calculating a chi-square goodness of fit test.
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure agitation scale ratings (Behavioral Activity Rating Scale) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Use the videotaped recordings to compare agitation scale ratings (Behavioral Activity Rating Scale) in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with three stressful ED experiences). Agitation will be rated on a 7-point scale (from "1 - difficult or unable to rouse" to "7 - violent, requires restraint").
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Measure agitation scale ratings (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale - Excited Component) in participants who undergo an ED-relevant stress task compared to a standard social stress task.
Use the videotaped recordings to compare agitation scale ratings (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale - Excited Component) in participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with three stressful ED experiences). Agitation will be rated on a 7-point scale (from "1 - absent" to "7 - extreme") on each of five items: poor impulse control, tension, hostility, uncooperativeness, and excitement.
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
Evaluate ethological ratings of non-verbal behaviors thought to indicate assertion using a rating scale (Ethological Coding System for Interviews) commonly employed in the clinical environment for this purpose.
Divide the videotaped recordings of the task into 15-second intervals and code for the presence or absence of non-verbal behaviors. These behaviors will then be calculated as a percentage (i.e., the number of time intervals with a behavior divided by the total number of time intervals). These will be compared participants randomized to a standard stressor task (i.e., with three standard scenarios) versus an ED-relevant stressor task (i.e., with three stressful ED experiences).
Time frame: Up to 12 hours
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