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Improving Participation in Pulmonary Rehabilitation Through Peer Support and Storytelling

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Interventions
Behavioral: Storytelling
Behavioral: Telephonic Peer Coaching
Registration Number
NCT05399056
Lead Sponsor
Baystate Medical Center
Brief Summary

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) affects approximately 16 million Americans and is characterized by recurrent exacerbations that lead to 1.5 million Emergency Department visits and 700,000 hospitalizations annually. Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is a structured program of exercise and self-management support that has been proven to relieve shortness of breath and increase quality of life when initiated after an exacerbation, but unfortunately, few eligible patients participate. This project will compare the effectiveness of two novel strategies - one involving video narratives of other patients telling their story of how they overcame challenges and completed PR, the other involving telephonic peer coaching with an individual with lived experience - to enhanced usual care, and to each other, at increasing patient participation in PR after an exacerbation.

Detailed Description

Exacerbations of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) lead to roughly 1.5 million ED visits and 700,000 hospitalizations annually. Recovery is slow and accompanied by high levels of acute care utilization and mortality. Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) is a structured program of exercise and self-management support that has been shown to relieve dyspnea and improve quality of life. Clinical guidelines recommend PR for patients with stable COPD and after an exacerbation. Unfortunately, even when referred by physicians, research has shown that few patients who might benefit from PR ever begin treatment.

The primary goal of this project is to identify effective strategies for promoting and sustaining participation in PR. Peer Support involves pairing a patient with a trained peer from a similar background, and facing similar health challenges, who has completed PR. There is a growing body of evidence demonstrating the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of telephonic peer support for chronic disease management. Narrative interventions, or 'Storytelling', are novel approaches for changing attitudes and behaviors of patients that involve creating and disseminating videos narrated by individuals with lived experience with the same condition or facing the same treatment. Storytelling interventions have been shown to help individuals achieve better blood pressure control, and storytelling is being studied in a variety of other clinical contexts.

In the R61 Phase, the investigators will recruit and train a cohort of peer coaches in behavior change techniques, and will recruit a diverse group of storytellers, capture their narratives on video, and create a library of 6-8 powerful stories. The investigators will finalize the protocol, trial infrastructure, and pilot the recruitment strategy. During the R33 Phase, the investigators will recruit 305 adults treated for exacerbation of COPD, and randomize them to 1) Enhanced "Usual Care" (eUC); 2) eUC + Storytelling; or 3) eUC + Peer Support. The investigators will evaluate the effectiveness of each strategy compared to eUC, and to each other, at promoting participation in PR at 6 months.

Using a mixed-methods approach, the investigators will evaluate intervention acceptability, sustainability, and cost, from the perspectives of the patients and peer coaches as well as PR program staff and hospital leadership. This information will be uses to refine the strategies and to disseminate an implementation package that will enable other PR programs to adopt these approaches.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
305
Inclusion Criteria
  • 40 years or older
  • Received treatment for COPD exacerbation in either inpatient or outpatient setting
  • Referred for pulmonary rehabilitation
  • Ability to understand and communicate in English
  • Willingness to participate in calls with peer coach and to view storytelling videos
  • Working phone
Exclusion Criteria
  • Unwilling to attend PR
  • Not eligible for PR based on spirometry or other clinical contraindications as determined by PR staff
  • Currently enrolled in, or completion of 12 or more sessions of PR in the past
  • Comfort measures only or Hospice care
  • Resident of long-term care facility
  • Unable or unwilling to give informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Enhanced usual care + StorytellingStorytellingSubjects randomized to the eUC + Storytelling intervention will view the video narrative(s) of one or more individuals with COPD who has overcome similar barriers and has attended a program of PR. Subjects will be shown the first chapter of the story immediately after randomization and will receive email and/or text messages to prompt viewing of subsequent chapters at 2 weeks, 1 month, 2 months, 3 months and 5 months. Emails and text messages will include a link to a REDCap document that contains a set of embedded video clips representing the next chapter in each storyteller's narrative.
Enhanced usual care + Peer supportTelephonic Peer CoachingSubjects randomized to the eUC + Peer support intervention will be matched with a peer coach of the same gender, race, and approximate age. For those enrolled during a hospitalization, coaches will be instructed to attempt the initial phone contact prior to the patient's discharge; for patients enrolled after an ED visit or outpatient exacerbation, coaches will be instructed to contact the patients within 72 hours of randomization. Peer coaches will be asked to complete at least one call each week during months 1-2, biweekly calls during months 3-4, and monthly calls during months 5-6. Coaches will be asked to follow a conversation guide, provided during the initial training, to structure phone conversations with their paired patient.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) sessions: Completion of ≥6 PR sessions within 6 months of randomization6 months
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Any attendance (yes/no) at PR within 6 months of randomization.6 months
Total number of PR sessions completed within 6 months of randomization.6 months
Time to first PR session attended6 months

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Baystate Health

🇺🇸

Springfield, Massachusetts, United States

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