Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Legacy Intervention Family Enactment
The research activities funded through PAR "Dissemination and Implementation Research in
Health" in grant R21NR011112 "Legacy Intervention Family Enactment (LIFE)" have been varied
and highly successful. The LIFE project was designed with three primary objectives. Aim 1
was to assess the efficacy of LIFE as delivered by Retired Senior Volunteers (RSVs) on
palliative care patients': (a) mood and emotional experience; (b) physical symptom burden;
and (c) experience of meaning. Aim 2 was to assess the efficacy of LIFE as delivered by RSVs
on one primary family caregiver's: (a) caregiving stress; (b) mood and emotional experience;
and (c) experience of positive aspects of caregiving. Aim 3 was to assess the ability of
RSVs to deliver LIFE effectively.
Although hospice and palliative care social workers frequently use reminiscence and creative
activities with their patients 16, such interventions need to be more accessible to patients
and families transitioning from community, hospital, and palliative care settings. If
hospice or palliative care is not chosen as a treatment option, few means of delivering
therapeutic reminiscence-based interventions exist. This represents a significant gap in
practice and in the psychosocial palliative care intervention literature. Kazdin and Blase
(2011) argue cogently that the community need for mental health services far outstrips the
number of providers available to assist those in distress. They call strongly for new
intervention delivery modes targeting prevention and treatment to alleviate suffering.
Hence, the purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effectiveness of retired senior
volunteers (RSVs), who are available nationally through the National Senior Corp Program, to
deliver a three-session reminiscence and creative activity intervention previously found
effective in improving palliative care patient and caregiver outcomes (Allen, 2009; Allen,
Hilgeman, Ege, Shuster, & Burgio, 2008). We hypothesized that palliative care patients and
their caregivers in the RSV-delivered intervention group would demonstrate improved
emotional and spiritual functioning relative to a supportive contact control group. If
successful, this mode of treatment delivery (e.g., RSV intervention) would represent a
significant step toward translation and greater access at earlier disease stages of
therapeutic psychosocial interventions for individuals near the end of life and their family
members.
Data were collected between June 2009 and December 2011 with approval from The University of
Alabama and the University of Alabama at Birmingham Institutional Review Boards. A variety
of methods were used for palliative care patient/caregiver dyad recruitment via
physicians/clinical champions at two university medical centers, one home health agency,
five assisted living facilities, four congregate apartment sites for older adults and those
with low income, one continuing care retirement community, and one rehabilitation unit in a
local skilled nursing facility. Sixty-six percent of dyads were physician-referred. A
community recruiter and advertisements in community and university print news media were
also used.
Patient/Caregiver Screening and Group Assignment After clinical champions at recruitment
sites explained the main components of the project, patients provided verbal consent to have
their contact information forwarded to research staff. Next, research staff contacted
patients who had expressed interest by phone, described the project in more detail, and,
after getting verbal consent, administered the screening measures (basic demographics, the
Vulnerable Elders Survey-13(VES), Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status-modified
[TICS-m]) over the telephone. Eligible patients directly nominated a "family" caregiver
(related by blood or marriage or fictive kin) for study participation.
Palliative care patients were eligible if they: (1) were age 55 or older; (2) were living in
the community or assisted living; (3) had an advanced illness or combination of chronic
illnesses; (4) received a score of three or greater on the VES; (5) had no more than mild
cognitive impairment as measured by a score of 17 or greater on the TICS-m; (6) received an
average of four hours per week of care from a caregiver; and (7) read and spoke English.
Caregivers were eligible if they: (1) were identified by an eligible palliative care
patient; (2) were over age of 19 (Alabama's age of majority); (3) were providing an average
of four hours per week of care for the patient; (4) were cognitively intact as measured by a
score of 28 or greater on the TICS-m; (5) lived nearby; and (6) read and spoke English.
Dyads were excluded if the patient was receiving hospice care or if either individual had
schizophrenia or bipolar disorder or had a nursing home admission planned within three
months.
Retired Senior Volunteers RSVs. RSVs were participants in the national Senior Corp program,
part of the Corporation for National and Community Service. They were recruited from
(blinded for review) and (blinded for review). The RSV program is open to all U.S. citizens,
nationals, or lawful permanent resident aliens aged 55 or older
(http://www.nationalservice.gov/programs/senior-corps/rsvp). Within this program, volunteers
receive standard pre-service orientation and training, supplemental insurance while on duty,
and, potentially, reimbursement for costs such as travel incurred during service. RSVs
receive no pay for the services they perform. In this study, RSVs were included if they: (1)
had a high school education; (2) read and spoke English; and (3) had a car and drove
independently.
Procedures This RCT compared the RSV-delivered intervention to a supportive telephone
contact control delivered by research staff. Prior experience in dealing with terminal
illness was not an eligibility criterion for RSVs or for research staff. However, RSVs
indicated if there were any type of advanced chronic illness they would prefer to avoid when
being assigned a patient-caregiver dyad. Whereas RSVs were over age 55 and had at least a
high school education, all research staff members were under 40 and had completed at least a
bachelor's degree in social/behavioral science or nursing. Our objective in this RCT was to
determine whether RSVs could be trained to effectively deliver the reminiscence and creative
activity intervention. Thus, the RSVs and research staff did not need to be similar. In
translation to the community, there will only be dyads receiving the intervention from RSVs.
Patient and caregiver written informed consent was obtained at baseline. After baseline,
dyads were stratified by race and site and randomly assigned to the intervention or control
condition. RSVs were asked to audio record the final intervention session for evaluation of
treatment acceptability by palliative care patients and caregivers.
Baseline and post-intervention assessments were completed in separate, concurrent interviews
with research staff not involved in providing control calls. Post-intervention assessments
occurred approximately one week after completion of intervention or control contacts, 15 to
20 weeks post-baseline. Qualitative content analysis was used to examine treatment
acceptability. Follow-up assessments for both groups were completed 13 to 14 weeks after the
post-intervention assessments.
RSV-delivered LIFE Intervention Group.Prior to delivering the manualized intervention, RSVs
received intensive training (approximately four to six hours over two sessions), that
included reading materials, structured role-play, and practice opportunities observed by a
licensed clinical psychologist (blinded for review). Research staff were on call for
consultation with RSVs. The LIFE Volunteer Interventionist Manual and LIFE Participant
Notebook have Flesch-Kincaid Grade Levels = 7.0 with a Flesch Reading Ease rating of 68.7%
and were available in 14-point font. The manual and accompanying workbook consist of: (1)
instructions about using the steps of problem solving (D'Zurilla & Nezu, 2007) to decide on
a period of life and creative activity project; (2) constructing a project; (3) evaluation
of the activity; and (4) an appendix with life review questions for dyads that find
generation of stories more difficult.
With the help of the RSV, patient-caregiver dyads in session one narrow the focus to a time
period in the patients' life that could be adequately represented in one tangible project
(e.g., scrapbook, cookbook, audiotapes) to represent the patient's values and achievements
in life. The RSV and dyad actively brainstormed ways to portray the life story; then the RSV
helped the dyad narrow the focus to one meaningful project, directing the dyad to the LIFE
Participant Notebook for tips in project construction. The dyad was asked to gather all
necessary materials (such as pictures, recipes, stories from other family members) and
actively work on completing a portion of the project between each session with the RSV.
During the second session, RSVs helped the dyad work on the activity and further use problem
solving skills. During the third visit, the patient and caregiver shared their activity with
the RSV, who discussed the dyad's feelings about the process, including a qualitative
evaluation of the LIFE project and what the family learned when creating it.
RSVs were carefully trained to monitor dyads' reactions. If either member of the dyad
reacted in a persistently negative manner to the intervention, the activity was
discontinued. RSVs were taught to look for depression in the following ways: look for a
saddened face, crying, shaky voice, statement from the caregiver that the care recipient
seems depressed (e.g., downtrodden, sad, blue). The LIFE Volunteer Interventionist Manual
includes "Feelings Checks" in which the RSVs ask, "How does talking about these memories
make you feel?" The average treatment fidelity score achieved by RSVs during training was
89.8%.
Patient-caregiver dyads received $25 to offset the costs of purchasing materials (e.g.,
photo albums, scrapbooks, photograph printing paper, etc.) desired for the project. Research
team members purchased and delivered materials to mobility restricted dyads.
Supportive Telephone Contact Control Group. Patients and caregivers each received three
separate, structured emotional support telephone calls with research staff (M duration = 13
minutes; SD = 6.5 minutes) to minimize differential drop-out with the RSV intervention
group. Control callers asked questions of participants and then engaged in supportive
conversations using empathic listening and reflection. Topics discussed included family,
intergenerational ties, and important aspects of the patient's life, but structured
reminiscence and the creative and therapeutic nature of legacy activities were not
discussed.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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