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Clinical Trial Summary

CATCHES is a novel intervention for preliminary testing, integrating Task Specific Therapy at home guided by Community Health Workers (CHW) under supervision of a licensed Physical Therapist (PT) guided by telehealth based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to reduce task specific fears through repetitive exposure and adaptive behavioral activation strategies and facilitate engagement in physical activity. 1. To integrate and establish feasibility of CATCHES intervention. Hypothesis: A multidisciplinary team providing home based TST with exposure therapy tailored to an underserved urban setting will inform a patient-centered behavioral intervention to reduce fear of falling (FOF) among post-acute stroke patients returning home. Feasibility outcomes will include recruitment, retention, and fidelity of implementation. 2. Test effects of the intervention on hypothesized treatment mechanism of fear of falling. Hypothesis: Therapy will reduce task specific fear of falling Primary outcome will be change in Activities-specific Balance Confidence Scale. 3. Explore physical activity measures subjectively and objectively. Exploratory outcomes include pre and post Timed Up and Go test, patient reported outcome surveys and activity as measured by wearable devices.


Clinical Trial Description

Stroke is a leading cause of disability in the country, and ethno-racial inequities are persistent. Almost two thirds of stroke patients are discharged home without effective rehabilitation or community-based support. Falls can occur at home, and associated fear of falling leads to avoidance behaviors that limit physical activity and community reintegration. Here the investigators propose a novel intervention in a feasibility study for preliminary testing, integrating Task Specific Therapy at home guided by Community Health Workers (CHW) under supervision of a licensed Physical Therapist (PT) in conjunction with telehealth based Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with reduce task specific fears through repetitive exposure and adaptive behavioral activation strategies to facilitate engagement in physical activity. The main objective is to assess the feasibility of this intervention. The secondary objective is to explore the underlying behavioral mechanism for behavior change and explore physical activity. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06314308
Study type Interventional
Source Columbia University
Contact Carmen E Castillo
Phone 212-305-7755
Email cec34@cumc.columbia.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 2024
Completion date May 2025