MedPath

Telehealth Assessment and Skill-Building Intervention for Stroke Caregivers (TASK III)

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Stroke
Family Caregivers
Interventions
Behavioral: Telehealth Assessment and Skill-Building Kit (TASK III) Group
Behavioral: Information Support and Referral (ISR) Group
Registration Number
NCT05304078
Lead Sponsor
University of Cincinnati
Brief Summary

Caring for a family member after a stroke can be very difficult and worsen the physical and mental health of untrained caregivers. The TASK III intervention is a unique, comprehensive caregiver intervention program that enables caregivers to develop the necessary skills to manage care for the survivor, while also taking care of their own health.

Detailed Description

Stroke is a leading cause of serious, long-term disability, and has a very sudden onset. Families are often thrust into providing care without sufficient training from health care providers, having to learn on their own to provide care. Studies show that caregiving without proper training can be detrimental to caregiver's physical and mental health, which can impede survivor rehabilitation and lead to institutionalization and higher societal costs. Unlike existing stroke caregiver interventions, which require costly face-to-face interactions, and that focus primarily on the survivor's care, the nurse-led Telephone Assessment and Skill-Building Kit (TASK II) is delivered completely by telephone, and empowers caregivers to address both their own and the survivor's needs using innovative skill-building strategies. Aligned with current patient and caregiver guidelines, TASK II demonstrated evidence of content validity, treatment fidelity, caregiver satisfaction, and efficacy for reducing caregiver depressive symptoms; however, TASK II revealed a need for a stronger focus on self-management (SM) strategies to improve caregiver symptoms and health, along with enhanced use of other telehealth modes of delivery. In an NINR-funded R21, the Telehealth Assessment and Skill-building Kit (TASK III) was optimized through the innovative leveraging of technologies and SM strategies to improve stroke family caregiver symptoms and health. A new goal setting tip sheet promotes caregivers' self-management of their own symptoms and health through the use of novel skill-building strategies. caregivers now choose how they want to access the TASK III Resource Guide (mailed hard copy, eBook, USB drive, or interactive website (https://www.task3web.com/) and how they would like to interact with the nurse (telephone, FaceTime, or online videoconferencing). Preliminary TASK III data provided evidence for feasibility of recruitment, retention, treatment fidelity, high satisfaction, and positive data trends in 74 stroke family caregivers randomized to TASK III (n=36) or to an Information, Support, and Referral (ISR) group (n=38). The purpose of the proposed study is to test short-term (immediately post-intervention at 8 weeks) and long-term (12, 24, and 52 weeks) efficacy of the TASK III intervention, compared with the ISR group, in 296 stroke caregivers. The primary outcome is caregiver life changes (i.e., physical health, physical functioning, emotional well-being, general health) as a result of providing care. Secondary outcomes include depressive symptoms (in caregivers with mild to severe depressive symptoms), other symptoms (stress, fatigue, sleep, pain, shortness of breath), unhealthy days, SM of diet/exercise, and self-reported healthcare utilization. Theoretically-based mediators include task difficulty, threat appraisal, and self-efficacy. Program evaluation outcomes (satisfaction, technology ratings) will also be analyzed. If TASK III is shown to be efficacious in the proposed randomized controlled clinical trial, our next goal will be to translate TASK III into ongoing stroke systems of care; and to adapt it for use among caregivers with other debilitating/chronic conditions providing a tremendous public health impact.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
296
Inclusion Criteria
  • Primary caregiver (family member or significant other providing care for a stroke survivor at home).
  • Fluent in the English language (i.e., able to read, speak, and understand English)
  • Access to telephone or computer.
  • No difficulties hearing or talking by telephone or computer.
  • Score 4 or more on a 6-item cognitive impairment screener.
  • Willing to participate in 9 calls from a nurse and 5 data collection interviews (Baseline, 8, 12, 24, 52).
Read More
Exclusion Criteria

Excluded if the survivor:

  • Had not had a stroke.
  • Did not need help from the caregiver.
  • Resides in a nursing home or long-term care facility.

Excluded if the caregiver or survivor is:

  • Under the age of 18 years.
  • Prisoner or on house arrest.
  • Pregnant.
  • Terminal illness (e.g., late stage cancer, end-of-life condition, renal failure requiring dialysis).
  • History of Alzheimer's, dementia, or severe mental illness (e.g., suicidal tendencies, schizophrenia, severe untreated depression or manic-depressive disorder).
  • History of hospitalization for alcohol or drug abuse within the past 5 years).
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
TASK III GroupTelehealth Assessment and Skill-Building Kit (TASK III) GroupThe Telehealth Assessment and Skill-Building Kit (TASK III) group
ISR GroupInformation Support and Referral (ISR) GroupThe Information, Support, and Referral (ISR) group
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Life ChangesBaseline to 8 weeks (primary endpoint), long-term baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks

Life Changes (i.e., changes in social functioning, subjective well-being, and physical health as a result of providing care) measured by the Bakas Caregiving Outcomes Scale (BCOS). The BCOS consists of 15 items rated on a response scale ranging from -3 (changed for the worst) to +3 (Changed for the best). The items are recoded (-3 = 1) (-2 = 2) (-1 = 3) (0 = 4) (1 = 5) (2 = 6) (3 = 7) so that positive numbers can be obtained for analysis. The recoded responses to the 15 items are summed for a total score with a possible range of 15-105. Higher scores indicate more positive life changes as a result of providing care.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Depressive SymptomsBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Scale (PHQ-9) 9 items rated on a scale from 0 = not at all to 4 = nearly every day. Higher scores reflect more depressive symptoms.

Self-management of ExerciseBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Physical Activity Scale for Elderly, PASE; consists 10 items measuring physical activity. The total PASE score is computed by multiplying the amount of time spent in each activity (hours/week) or participation (yes/no) in an activity by the empirically derived item weights and summing over all activities. The PASE score can be stratified in tertiles: 0 to 40 (sedentary), 41 to 90 (light physical activity) and more than 90 (moderate to intense activity).

Self-management of DietBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Dietary Screener Questionnaire consists of 30 items measuring diet intake. Scores provide predicted intake of fruits, vegetables, added sugars, whole grains, fiber, calcium, and dairy.

Other SymptomsBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Visual numeric symptoms used in the Chronic Disease Self Management Program (CDSMP) study on a scale from 1-10 (stress, fatigue, sleep, pain, shortness of breath). Higher scores indicate higher severity of the symptom.

Unhealthy DaysBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Unhealthy Days (UD), 2 items, number of days in the past 30 days that physical and mental health have not been good. Items totaled, then capped at 30 days for a total score. Analyzed at the item level as well.

Self-management of StepsBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Pedometer measuring number of steps per day.

Healthcare UtilizationBaseline to 8 weeks (shortterm), baseline to 12, 24, and 52 weeks (long-term)

Self-reported past 3 months, hospitalizations, ER visits, Office visits (medical, dental, vision), immunizations, screening.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Cincinnati College of Nursing

🇺🇸

Cincinnati, Ohio, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath