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The Feasibility of the Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) Intervention-OUTPATIENT

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Sickle Cell Disease
Stress
Pain
Interventions
Behavioral: Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH)
Behavioral: Self-monitoring
Registration Number
NCT06580067
Lead Sponsor
University of Florida
Brief Summary

The goal of this research study is to reduce stress and improve sickle cell disease (SCD) pain control and sleep quality with less opioid use by determining the feasibility of an intervention with self-management combined intercessory and petitionary prayer, named Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) stress reduction intervention using a mobile smart device. Currently, opioid analgesics are primarily used to treat SCD pain while self-managed behavioral modalities such as PUSH, are rarely used. Little is known about the effects or mechanisms of PUSH on pain, stress, and sleep symptoms in adults with SCD. Emerging evidence from the hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis theory offer insights for understanding the mechanisms. Adding PUSH as a supplement to analgesic therapies will address the dearth of self-management strategies for controlling pain in SCD. PUSH is a simple and cost-effective non-drug intervention that could reduce pain and stress in inpatients with SCD. GR is an intervention where inpatients with SCD are directed to listen to the audio recordings of the PUSH prayer session.

Detailed Description

The purpose of this research study is to see if a new computerized stress reduction program, called Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) stress reduction intervention, can be used to teach people who have sickle cell disease (SCD) how to track their stress and pain daily and use guided audio-visual relaxation exercises to help them reduce their stress and pain. To obtain preliminary data for a larger randomized controlled trial, we propose to recruit 30 adult outpatients with SCD.

The investigators will stratify patients on worst pain intensity (\<=5 and \>5) and randomly assign 15 adults to Attention Control (Daily stress/pain tracking on Days 1-6) and 15 adults to Experimental (PUSH Prayer Fellowship on Day 1 and daily stress/pain tracking and PUSH intervention on Days 2-6) groups.

Immediate effects on pain, stress, and relaxation responses after the PUSH Prayer Fellowship will be examined. Patients will continue the trial for additional 6 days, with self-management on Days 2-6 and posttest on Day 7 while hospitalized to test short-term (7 days) effects of PUSH on outcomes (pain, stress, sleep quality, and opioid use).

During Days 2-6, the experimental group will participate in an audio/visual Zoom recorded prayer session that will be conducted specifically for each patient by the interventionist. Following the prayer session, the link to the recorded prayer is uploaded to the PAINReportIt program. Patients will access the recorded prayer session on Days 2-6. These patients will listen to the recorded PUSH prayer session at stress onset and as often as they desire. We will investigate mechanisms by which PUSH produces its effects in adult outpatients with SCD.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • Has SCD diagnosis;
  • Reports pain 3 or greater in the previous 24 hours (0-10 scale)
  • Speaks and reads English
  • 18 years of age or older
  • Uses opioid analgesics on "as needed" or "continuous" basis
  • Allows healing prayers to be offered for them in the name of Jesus Christ
Exclusion Criteria
  • Legally blind
  • Physically or cognitively unable to complete study measures

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) video clipPray Until Something Happens (PUSH)This intervention is a 30-minute petitionary prayer, named Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) stress reduction intervention using a mobile smart device.
Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) video clipSelf-monitoringThis intervention is a 30-minute petitionary prayer, named Pray Until Something Happens (PUSH) stress reduction intervention using a mobile smart device.
Attention Control GroupPray Until Something Happens (PUSH)The second group will have access to the same internet-based application to track daily their stress and pain levels but will not be able to view our Pray Until Something Happens intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Current PainImmediate (Day 1 baseline) and Days 2-7

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Pain intensity scale: A 3-item scale that asks patients to report their pain now, worst, and average on a scale of 1 to 5 where 1 is "had no pain" and 5 is "very severe." We will estimate intervention effects using regression analysis.

Average pain intensityShort-term (Day 7)

A 3-item scale that asks patients to report their current, least, and worst pain intensity today, on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 is "no pain" and 10 is "pain as bad as it could be." We will average the three scores to create an average pain intensity score. We will estimate intervention effects using linear regression.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Current stressImmediate (Day 1 baseline) and Days 2-7

Stress intensity scale: A 3-item scale that asks patients to report their current, least, and worst stress intensity today, on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 is "no stress" and 10 is "stress as bad as it could be." We will estimate intervention effects using linear regression.

Average stress intensityShort-term (Day 7)

Stress intensity scale: A 3-item scale that asks patients to report their current, least, and worst stress intensity today, on a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 is "no stress" and 10 is "stress as bad as it could be." We will average the three scores to create an average stress intensity score. We will estimate intervention effects using linear regression.

Sleep qualityImmediate (Day 1 baseline) and Short-term (Day 7)

Sleep quality scale: A self-administered questionnaire that incorporates a discretizing VAS. The questionnaire instructions direct the respondent to rate the overall quality of sleep over a 7-day recall period on a discretizing VAS, whereby the respondent marks an integer score from 0 to 10, according to the following five categories: 0 = terrible, 1-3 = poor, 4-6 = fair, 7-9 = good, and 10 = excellent. When rating their sleep quality, respondents are instructed to consider the following core components of sleep quality: how many hours of sleep they had, how easily they fell asleep, how often they woke up during the night (except to go to the bathroom), how often they woke up earlier than they had to in the morning, and how refreshing their sleep was.

Opioid useImmediate (Day 1 baseline) and Short-term (Day 7)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Florida

🇺🇸

Gainesville, Florida, United States

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