Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Trial of the "Living Well With Hearing Loss Workshop"
This study evaluates whether a 2 hour group session, "The Living Well with Hearing Loss Workshop," can successfully teach hard of hearing people how to best use hearing aids and a variety of personal skills to compensate for the limitations of their impaired ears.
Hearing aids are essential to the rehabilitation of veterans who have acquired hearing loss.
However, as with most prosthetic devices, the use of hearing aids does not result in fully
normal functioning, and research shows that residual handicapping effects of hearing loss
recur for many veterans. Hearing loss now affects 31 million Americans and is increasing in
prevalence due to the "graying of America" and the noise-traumas of modern life, including
modern warfare. VA spent over $119,000,000 on hearing aid technology for eligible veterans
in FY 2004.Therefore, evidence-based rehabilitation treatments to alleviate avoidable
hearing handicaps is a priority for VA and non-VA audiology. VA audiology clinics, however,
are forced by high work loads to follow tight schedules for fitting hearing aids, with
little time available to counsel veterans on skills for dealing effectively with the
auditory and psychosocial challenges specific to their personal life style.
The proposed study will present and evaluate a single session, two hour long rehabilitation
treatment model, "The Living Well with Hearing Loss Workshop." This cost-effective group
intervention draws from research in psychology and behavioral medicine, as well as
audiology, to teach specific skills that empower veterans to self-manage the adverse
consequences of their hearing loss. The workshops will use multi-media presentations to
train participating veterans in cognitive, behavioral and affective coping skills, while the
patient-centered process focuses on collaborative problem-solving of hearing-loss-challenges
participants present to their groups as personally important.
This is a dual site, randomized clinical trial, conducted by Co-PIs Dr. Turbin, a
psychologist and Investigator at the NCRAR in the Portland, Oregon VAMC; and Dr. Abrams, a
rehabilitative audiologist and Chief of Audiology Services at the Bay Pines, Florida VAMC.
We will recruit a total of 310 veterans, all patients at the VAMC audiology clinics in
Portland or Bay Pines, who are: 1) recipients of their first hearing aids, 2) have a mild to
moderately-severe hearing loss in their better ear, and 3) present no other condition that
would preclude their participation in age-appropriate interpersonal activities. Half of
these veterans will be randomized to each of our two treatments: the Control condition of
routine VA hearing-aid-rehabilitation-alone, and our Experimental Treatment condition of
routine audiology services plus our workshop intervention. All subjects will complete three
questionnaires as Pre-test measures before hearing aid fitting, eight weeks after hearing
aid fitting as Re-tests and then four months later as Post-tests. An additional personality
inventory will be administered only at baseline, yielding co-variates for interpreting
possible within-group variance. Workshop participants will attend their session within one
month of hearing aid fitting. The workshops will be facilitated by audiologists we will
train in our empowering, patient-centered, coping-skills based model.
We hypothesize that our Workshop participants will show enhanced personal adjustment and use
of communication strategies when compared to both baseline and to Control subjects, and
further hypothesize that our Workshop participants will exceed our Controls in self reported
hearing aid benefit at Re-test, and retain these differential treatment benefits at
Post-test. The outcome data will enhance our understanding about the coping processes by
which people respond to their hearing disability and its treatment by hearing-aids-alone,
and about how well Workshop participants learn and utilize the skills taught in our
treatment model. The findings from this research can foster continued development and
implementation of evidence-based rehabilitation treatments and, if shown to be effective,
our model can be replicated at audiology clinics, adapted for video or online training, or
used by other health care professionals or even lay mentors to enhance the quality of life
of people who are hard of hearing.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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