A pilot study to establish feasibility and acceptability of a yoga and self-management education intervention to support caregivers and care receivers with persistent pain.

IF 1.3 Q3 REHABILITATION
Frontiers in rehabilitation sciences Pub Date : 2024-10-03 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fresc.2024.1397220
Arlene A Schmid, Christine A Fruhauf, Aimee L Fox, Julia L Sharp, Jennifer Dickman Portz, Heather J Leach, Marieke Van Puymbroeck
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Approximately 75% of caregivers providing unpaid care to family members or friends experience persistent pain. Simultaneously, individuals who require caregiving commonly experience pain. The inherent complexity of pain is enhanced by relationship dynamics of two closely tied individuals (i.e., caregiving dyad = caregivers and care recipients). Currently there are no proven pain interventions that target the caregiving dyad. Thus, the purpose of this pilot study was to assess the feasibility of a new behavioral multi-modal intervention, the Merging Yoga and self-management to develop Skills (MY-Skills) intervention.

Methods: Each participant was part of a caregiving dyad and all participants had moderate to severe musculoskeletal pain, a score of ≥4 of 6 on the short mini-mental status exam, were ≥18 years old, sedentary, able to speak English, able to stand, and living at home. Participants were randomized to MY-Skills or the control group. MY-Skills was offered twice a week for eight weeks and each two-hour session included yoga and self-management education developed specifically for caregiving dyads experiencing persistent pain. MY-Skills was group based and developed as an in-person intervention. Due to Covid-19, the intervention was moved online and data are presented for in-person and online cohorts. Benchmarks for feasibility were set a priori, addressing: recruitment, attrition, attendance, safety, acceptability/satisfaction, and study completion.

Results: Thirteen participants completed the in-person MY-Skills intervention (caregivers n = 7, care-receivers n = 6) and 18 individuals completed the online MY-Skills intervention (9 dyads). Most participants had pain for ≥10 years. Recruitment and attrition benchmarks for the in-person intervention were not met; yet they were met for the online version. In-person and online MY-Skills intervention attendance, safety, acceptability/satisfaction, and completion exceeded benchmark criteria.

Discussion: The MY-Skills intervention appears feasible and acceptable, however changes to recruitment criteria are necessary. Additional testing and larger sample sizes are required to test efficacy.

Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov, #NCT03440320.

一项试点研究旨在确定瑜伽和自我管理教育干预的可行性和可接受性,以支持患有持续性疼痛的照顾者和受照顾者。
简介在为家人或朋友提供无偿护理的护理人员中,约有 75% 的人经历过持续疼痛。与此同时,需要护理的人也普遍感到疼痛。疼痛的内在复杂性因两个紧密相连的个体(即护理二人组=护理者和受护理者)的关系动态而加剧。目前还没有针对护理二人组的行之有效的疼痛干预措施。因此,本试点研究的目的是评估一种新的多模式行为干预--融合瑜伽和自我管理以培养技能(MY-Skills)干预--的可行性:每位参与者都是护理二人组中的一员,所有参与者都有中度至重度肌肉骨骼疼痛,在简短的迷你精神状态检查中得分≥4(6 分),年龄≥18 岁,久坐,能说英语,能站立,住在家里。参与者被随机分配到 MY-Skills 或对照组。MY-Skills每周两次,为期八周,每次两小时的课程包括瑜伽和自我管理教育,专门为经历持续疼痛的护理二人组开发。MY-Skills 以小组为基础,是一种面对面的干预措施。由于 Covid-19 的原因,该干预被转移到了网上,并提供了现场和网上组群的数据。可行性基准是事先设定的,涉及:招募、自然减员、出勤率、安全性、可接受性/满意度和研究完成度:13名参与者完成了现场MY-Skills干预(护理者n=7,受护理者n=6),18名参与者完成了在线MY-Skills干预(9对)。大多数参与者的疼痛时间≥10 年。现场干预的招募和自然减员基准均未达到;但在线版本的招募和自然减员基准均达到。现场和在线 MY-Skills 干预的出席率、安全性、可接受性/满意度和完成度均超过了基准标准:讨论:MY-Skills 干预似乎是可行和可接受的,但有必要修改招募标准。试验注册:试验注册:Clinicaltrials.gov,#NCT03440320。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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