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Heartache and Backache- An Online Intervention Addressing Emotional and Physical Pain

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Chronic Pain (Back / Neck)
Interventions
Behavioral: Pain Psychology Neuroscience + Healthy Habits Disclosure
Behavioral: Health Behavior Control + Healthy Habits Disclosure
Behavioral: Pain Psychology Neuroscience + Written Emotional Disclosure
Behavioral: Health Behavior Control + Written Emotional Disclosure
Registration Number
NCT05513274
Lead Sponsor
Wayne State University
Brief Summary

This study is designed to determine if a brief educational program and a written emotional disclosure task can improve chronic back/neck pain-related outcomes and change pain beliefs and other processes in individuals with chronic back pain.

Individuals will be randomly assigned to an experimental condition (pain and affect neuroscience education) or a control condition (general health activities questionnaire), and then subsequently randomized to a second experimental condition (written emotional disclosure) or a control condition (writing about healthy habits).

Analyses will examine the main and interactive effects of the pain and affect neuroscience education and written emotional disclosure on improved pain-related outcomes at 1-month follow-up. Participants in both the experimental conditions are expected to show more improvement on pain severity, pain interference, psychological distress and psychological attitudes toward pain at follow-up, relative to participants in the control groups.

Detailed Description

This study will recruit adults with chronic back and neck pain. Participants will be adults between the aged of 18 and 75. Participants will be excluded if they have the presence of serious disease or impairment (cancer, systemic infection, serious vision impairment), if there is clear evidence of significant structural damage likely causing their pain (eg, vertebral compression fracture); being considered for interventional spine procedures (eg, steroidal injections) or surgery; leg or arm pain more severe than back or neck pain; if they have been diagnosed with fibromyalgia, rheumatoid arthritis or have active psychosis. Participants will be allowed to engage in this study regardless of current medication use or engagement in other treatment.

Participants who are interested in participating will complete a brief online zoom interview to determine eligibility and will be provided with basic information about the study. Once eligibility has been determined, consent form and, baseline measures will be sent out and completed online.

Participants will be emailed confirming they are still interested in participating. Once they reply, they will complete baseline measures (on-line) and then be randomized 1:1 to the pain psychology and affect neuroscience education intervention or the health behavior intervention. For the pain neuroscience education, participants will complete a 15 to 20-minute on-line exercise that inquires about 5 domains: the degree of central sensitization symptoms, catastrophizing , personality factors, stressors that triggered or exacerbated the pain, and adverse childhood experiences. The health behavior control intervention participants will engage in a 15 to 20-minute on-line exercise examining their health behaviors in five domains: exercise, sleep, diet, hygiene, and social connections.

Once they have completed the first intervention participants will be randomly assigned to the written emotional disclosure task or the healthy behavior-writing task. For the written emotional disclosure task participants will be asked to write for 20 minutes about their very deepest thoughts and feelings about the most traumatic experience of their lives. There will be a 10-minute break and when they return participants will be asked to write again for 20 minutes about how you have come to understand what happened and how you have changed because of the event. The healthy behavior writing task will include writing for 20 minutes a letter to a person of their choosing describing healthy behaviors, a 10 minute break and a second 20 minute writing task describing a time when they performed a healthy behaviors.

Follow-up measures will be administered 5 weeks after the intervention. There will be clinical outcomes assessed that reflect changes in pain severity, pain-related interference and pain catastrophizing. Psychological outcomes that reflect changes in symptoms for depression, anxiety, fatigue and sleep. Finally there will be attitudinal outcomes in stigma around chronic pain and patients' attributions about the role of psychological and brain-based factors in pain and self efficacy.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
120
Inclusion Criteria
  • English speaking
  • Chronic musculoskeletal back or neck pain for greater than 1 year as primary symptom complaint
  • Participants living in western countries USA, UK and Australia
  • Have access to a computer or smartphone
Exclusion Criteria
  • Presence of serious disease or impairment (cancer, systemic infection, serious vision impairment)
  • Clear evidence of significant structural damage likely causing their pain (eg, vertebral compression fracture);
  • Being considered for interventional spine procedures (eg, steroidal injections) or surgery;
  • Leg or arm pain more severe than back or neck pain
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Fibromyalgia
  • Active psychosis

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Pain Psychology Neuroscience + Healthy Habits DisclosurePain Psychology Neuroscience + Healthy Habits DisclosurePain Neuroscience Education followed by Healthy Habits writing
Health Behavior + Healthy Habits DisclosureHealth Behavior Control + Healthy Habits DisclosureHealth behavior intervention followed by healthy habits writing
Pain Psychology Neuroscience+ Written Emotional DisclosurePain Psychology Neuroscience + Written Emotional DisclosurePain Neuroscience Education exercise followed by Written Emotional Disclosure
Health Behavior + Written Emotional DisclosureHealth Behavior Control + Written Emotional DisclosureHealth behavior education followed by written emotional disclosure
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Brief Pain Inventory Brief Pain Inventory pain severity scale (0 - 10; higher values = greater pain severity)Change from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Pain severity scale (0 - 10; higher values = greater pain severity)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System: Depression short form 8bChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Self-reported depression (8-40; higher values= greater severity of depression)

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System: Anxiety short form 8aChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Self-reported anxiety (8-40; higher values= greater severity of anxiety)

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System: FatigueChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Self reported fatigue (4-20; higher values= increased fatigue)

Pain Catastrophizing ScaleChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Pain Catastrophizing Scale (Sullivan et al., 1995): A summed score of the 13 Catastrophizing items will be computed (0-52, higher scores indicate greater catastrophizing)

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System: SleepChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Self reported sleep (4-20; higher values= increased sleep difficulties)

Pain attributions questionnairesChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

The 4-item psychological attribution scale assesses patients' beliefs that their thoughts and feelings and psychological therapy impacts pain, and the 3-item brain attribution scale assesses patient's beliefs that their pain is brain-based. Higher scores indicate a greater belief that pain is a brain-related \[brain attribution\] and that pain is affected by thoughts, feelings, and psychological interventions \[psychological attribution\])

Stigma Scale for Chronic Illnesses Short Form (SSCI-8)Change from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Stigma Scale for Chronic Illnesses short form: A summed score of the 8 items will be computed (8-40m higher scored indicate greater stigma)

General Self Efficacy ScaleChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

General Self Efficacy Scale: A summed score of the 10 items, will be computed (10-40) higher scored indicate greater self efficacy

Emotional approach coping scaleChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

Emotional approach coping scale: A summed score of the 8 items, will be computed (8-32) higher scored indicate greater emotional approach coping

Pain InterferenceChange from baseline to 5 weeks follow-up

PROMIS Pain Interference - Short Form 6b (6-20; higher values= greater pain interference)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The New School for Social Research Department of Psychology

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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