Chronic pelvic pain (CPP) is a debilitating condition that disproportionately affects women Veterans (25% vs. 16% of civilian women). Predisposing factors include higher rates of strenuous physical activity during military service, duty-related injuries, psychiatric distress, and sexual trauma. CPP is associated with a high burden of illness, disability, and economic costs (estimated at $5.8 billion in annual health care expenditures). Multimodal, interdisciplinary approaches are emphasized in the treatment of CPP. Psychological interventions are essential for optimizing pain self-management for CPP. Psychosocial factors are known to affect pain intensity and recovery. Women Veterans report higher rates of depression and anxiety with CPP, that leads to greater disability and poorer quality of life. Cognitive and behavioral therapies, such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), are effective options for pain self-management. Barriers to effective pain treatment are high attrition and non-adherence. Additionally, women Veterans prefer treatments that address their gender-specific needs. Gender-specific services remain limited in the Veterans Health Administration (VHA). In line with VHA's priorities to expand women's health care, this study implements ACT in a brief intervention format to address a highly prevalent reproductive health issue among women Veterans. ACT is transdiagnostic and thus provides a unified approach to the treatment of co-occurring disorders, such as chronic pain, depression, and anxiety. Brief workshop formats increase treatment completion and patient engagement. This study seeks to adapt an existing 1-day ACT workshop for use in VHA integrated primary care (PCMHI) and specialty medical settings with women veterans experiencing CPP. Primary outcomes are feasibility and acceptability of the adapted intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
13
The Brief ACT for Pelvic Pain treatment will include three weekly, 90-minute group sessions that teach Veterans new ways to respond to difficult thoughts and emotions related to pain (Acceptance and Mindfulness Training) and encourage behavioral (re)engagement in meaningful life activities (Behavioral Change Training). The overall goal is to cultivate psychological flexibility by helping Veterans learn to respond to life events in ways which do not exacerbate difficulties or restrict engagement in meaningful activities. Workshop content is integrated with education on pelvic pain (its diagnostic criteria, etiology, and associated health outcomes) to increase alignment of the treatment with patient needs.
Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center
Houston, Texas, United States
Feasibility of recruitment
Recruitment rates (number enrolled/number who complete treatment)
Time frame: Up to 1 year
Acceptability of intervention
Open-ended question about how satisfactory veterans find the intervention (including likes, dislikes, and recommendations for improving the intervention)
Time frame: 2-month follow-up
Mean change score in Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)
The 9-item PHQ-9 measures severity of depressive symptoms. Scores range from 0-36 with higher scores reflecting greater symptom severity.
Time frame: Change at 2-month follow-up from baseline
Mean change score in Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7)
The 7-item GAD-7 measures severity of anxiety symptoms. Scores range from 0-28 with higher scores reflecting greater symptom severity.
Time frame: Change at 2-month follow-up from baseline
Mean change score in McGill Pain Questionnaire
The McGill Pain Questionnaire assesses pain intensity and type. Scores range from 0-100 with higher scores reflecting greater pain severity.
Time frame: Change at 2-month follow-up from baseline
Mean change in Short Form Veteran Health Survey (VR-12)
The VR-12 is a short-form measures self-reported health and functioning. Higher scaled scores indicate greater functional impairment.
Time frame: Change at 2-month follow-up from baseline
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