Research and Development Service, James A Haley Veterans' Hospital, Tampa, FL, United States.
Division of Epidemiology, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2024 Oct 18;26:e57322. doi: 10.2196/57322.
Nonpharmacological interventions for veterans are needed to help them manage chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. Complementary and integrative health (CIH) interventions such as Mission Reconnect (MR) seek to provide veterans with the option of a partnered, self-directed intervention that teaches CIH skills remotely to support symptom management.
The purpose of this study was to describe the physical, psychological, and social outcomes of a self-directed mobile- and web-based CIH intervention for veterans with comorbid chronic pain and PTSD and their partners and qualitatively examine their MR user experience.
A sample of veteran-partner dyads (n=364) were recruited to participate in a mixed methods multisite waitlist control randomized controlled trial to measure physical, psychological, and social outcomes, with pain as the primary outcome and PTSD, depression, stress, sleep, quality of life, and relationships as secondary outcomes. Linear mixed models were constructed for primary and secondary patient-reported outcomes. The quantitative analysis was triangulated using qualitative interviews from a subsample of dyads (n=35) to examine participants' perceptions of their program experience.
Dyads were randomized to 2 groups: intervention (MR; 140/364, 38.5%) and waitlist control (136/364, 37.4%). No significant change was observed in overall pain, sleep, PTSD, quality of life, relationship satisfaction, overall self-compassion, or compassion for others. A significant reduction in pain interference in mood (P=.008) and sleep (P=.008) was observed among the veteran MR group that was not observed in the waitlist control group. We also observed a positive effect of the MR intervention on a reduction in negative affect associated with pain (P=.049), but this effect did not exceed the adjusted significance threshold (P=.01). Significant improvements were also observed for partners in the affection (P=.007) and conflict (P=.001) subdomains of the consensus and satisfaction domains. In contrast to quantitative results, qualitative data indicated that intervention impacts included improved sleep and reduced pain, anxiety, and stress and, in contrast to the survey data, overall improvement in PTSD symptoms and social relationships. Participants' overall impressions of MR highlight usability and navigation, perceptions on packaging and content, and barriers to and facilitators of MR use.
Adjunctive CIH-based modalities can be delivered using web and mobile apps but should be developed and tailored using established best practices. MR may be beneficial for veterans with pain and PTSD and their partners. Further pragmatic trials and implementation efforts are warranted.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03593772; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03593772.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.2196/13666.
需要为退伍军人提供非药物干预措施,以帮助他们管理慢性疼痛和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状。补充和整合健康(CIH)干预措施,如使命连接(MR),旨在为退伍军人提供一种伙伴式、自我指导的干预选择,远程教授 CIH 技能,以支持症状管理。
本研究旨在描述一种自我指导的移动和基于网络的 CIH 干预措施对患有慢性疼痛和 PTSD 共病的退伍军人及其伴侣的身体、心理和社会结果,并定性探讨他们对 MR 的用户体验。
招募了一组退伍军人-伴侣对(n=364)参加一项混合方法多点候补控制随机对照试验,以衡量身体、心理和社会结果,疼痛为主要结果,PTSD、抑郁、压力、睡眠、生活质量和关系为次要结果。为主要和次要患者报告结果构建了线性混合模型。从亚组(n=35)中的一对夫妇进行了定量分析的三角测量,以检查参与者对他们的项目体验的看法。
对夫妇进行了 2 组随机分组:干预组(MR;140/364,38.5%)和候补对照组(136/364,37.4%)。总体疼痛、睡眠、PTSD、生活质量、关系满意度、整体自我同情或对他人的同情均无显著变化。MR 组在情绪(P=.008)和睡眠(P=.008)方面的疼痛干扰显著减少,但在候补对照组中没有观察到。我们还观察到 MR 干预对与疼痛相关的负面情绪的减少有积极影响(P=.049),但这种影响没有超过调整后的显著性阈值(P=.01)。伴侣在共识和满意度领域的情感(P=.007)和冲突(P=.001)子领域也有显著改善。与定量结果相反,定性数据表明,干预的影响包括睡眠和疼痛、焦虑和压力的减少,与调查数据相反,PTSD 症状和社会关系总体改善。参与者对 MR 的总体印象突出了可用性和导航、包装和内容的感知,以及 MR 使用的障碍和促进因素。
基于 CIH 的辅助方式可以通过网络和移动应用程序提供,但应使用既定的最佳实践进行开发和定制。MR 可能对患有疼痛和 PTSD 的退伍军人及其伴侣有益。需要进一步进行实用试验和实施工作。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03593772; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03593772.
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):RR2-10.2196/13666.