Brain Injuries, Traumatic Clinical Trial
Official title:
REACT - Recovery Enhancement From TBI Using ACT. A Pilot Study.
Is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) feasible and acceptable for adults with severe
Traumatic Brain Injury (sTBI) in inpatient services? sTBI is associated with depression,
anxiety and low self awareness. A key factor in recovery is adjustment to the effects of
injury. Psychological intervention may facilitate this change; however what works is
unclear. ACT seeks to improve psychological flexibility; the ability to be present with
difficult thoughts and emotions, rather than fighting them, and to accept ourselves as we
are, not what we believe we should be. Current research is limited, but what is published
suggests it may be useful for this group.
Due to the limited research this pilot study aims to conduct preliminary analysis on the
acceptability and feasibility of ACT for people with sTBI whilst also examining the
suitability of the study protocol in order to make recommendations for future studies.
Clients and staff from three Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust (BIRT) centres will be
recruited, one of which will serve as the intervention centre.
Clients in the intervention group will be asked to complete questionnaires a week before and
after participation in the 6 week ACT programme. Clients in the comparison group will be
asked to complete questionnaires a week before and after receiving 6 weeks of treatment as
usual (TAU). The treatment group will also receive TAU. All participants will be invited to
participate in a focus group at the end of this 8 week period to discuss their involvement
in the study.
Staff will be asked to complete a parallel version of one of the client questionnaires
within a similar timeframe. In addition staff at the intervention centre will be invited to
attend a focus group and complete an additional questionnaire after the eight week period.
A pilot study design will initially assess the feasibility and acceptability of the ACT and
study protocol with this client group in order to inform a future clinical trial.
The methodology involves both quantitative and qualitative methods and will involve
inpatients at Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust (BIRT) units, staff involved in the day to
day care of inpatients and clinicians involved in the administration of therapy.
Quantitative methods (questionnaires) were chosen to assess any possible change in
assessment measures. The measures chosen have been previously used. They have good validity
(the ability to answer the questions asked) and reliability, and therefore are practically
suitable for measuring outcomes of therapy. Qualitative methods (focus groups) were also
chosen, owing to the pilot nature of this research, in order to obtain personal opinion on
the acceptability of the intervention and the treatment protocol, from those participating.
The intervention will be administered, alongside TAU, to inpatients at a BIRT centre in
Glasgow and will be compared to a comparison group which will receive TAU only (who will be
based in BIRT centres in either York and/or Leeds). The rational for choosing a BIRT centre
in Glasgow for the intervention group is one of convenience as all researchers involved in
the study are based in Glasgow. This will help facilitate data collection and reduce cost.
Given that all BIRT centres adhere to a similar philosophy of care and rehabilitation and
service user profiles are relatively similar, it was believed that recruiting elsewhere for
the purpose of comparison would be appropriate. Recruiting treatment and comparison groups
from separate centres also ensures that clients receiving TAU only do not learn ACT
strategies accidentally through discussion with peers or staff. If this were to happen any
indication of change could not be attributed to the difference in treatments provided.
Five participant groups will be recruited:
- clients in the inpatient setting (treatment group),
- clients in the inpatient setting (comparison group),
- care staff working directly with clients (treatment group),
- care staff working directly with clients (comparison group)
- psychology staff involved in administering the intervention.
All participants will be provided with an information sheet and consent will be sought prior
to their participation in the study. All interventions, assessments and focus groups will be
completed at the participants respective centres. All recruitment, with the exception of the
psychology staff who are a convenient sample, will be conducted by a staff member not
involved in the direct write up of the study. Further to this all outcome measures and focus
groups will be conducted by researchers not involved in the provision of treatment.
Psychology staff at the intervention centre who have completed training on ACT will be
further informed of the study. If they choose to participate they will recruit clients at
BIRT in Glasgow, completing a record form identifying inclusion and exclusion criteria met.
This form will allow the staff to outline any barriers or difficulties encountered as part
of this process. Information sheets will then be provided to recruited clients, in addition
to care staff who work with them.
The study will also be explained to heads of service at each of the comparison sites,
providing them both with an integrated protocol. They will identify a point of contact who
will complete recruitment as detailed above.
Each participant will be given between 24hours and 1 week to decide whether to participate.
Researchers will first meet with care staff informed of the study at each centre to discuss
their own consent and provide consent form to them. At this point only risk information for
each client will be discussed with the care staff with the purpose of ensuring the safety of
both the clients and researchers at first point of contact.
Researchers will meet with recruited clients individually to discuss consent and complete
questionnaires.
Researchers will again meet with care staff to discuss client demographic information and to
complete one questionnaire, if clients have consented for this to take place.
The trained psychology staff will provide 6 weeks of ACT training to clients in the
treatment group weekly. Each group will have up to 4 clients per group.
Researchers will meet with both groups after this time period to repeat testing of the
questionnaires with both staff.
Details concerning what treatments, aside from ACT, were provided to each client during the
6 week period will be collected from case files and through discussion with staff.
Clients at all centres will be invited to take part in a focus group at this time to discuss
their participation in the study.
Care staff at the intervention centre will be invited to participate in a focus group.
Psychology staff at the intervention centre will be invited to participate in a focus group
and complete a questionnaire.
Further research tasks to be completed by staff:
Any observations as part of applying the study protocol will also be documented. For
example, the participant flow, drop out rates, the administration of questionnaires, the
storage of materials and ethical issues will all be commented upon as per the objective of
the overall pilot study.
Guidelines for reporting Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) will be piloted as part of this
study. In order to establish base rates for this group, a record will be kept of any SAE
experience by participants of intervention or comparison group. A checklist of potential
SAEs will be used at both times of testing for treatment and control group in order to
establish whether any SAEs occurred.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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