Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04386655

Brain Injury Coping Skills - Telemedicine: Phase II

Telemedicine Brain Injury Coping Skills (BICS-T) Support Group for Brain Injury Survivors and Caregivers

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
49 (actual)
Sponsor
Devan Parrott · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

For phase II, the objective is to compare the effectiveness of BICS-T with the well-established BICS in-person group. Information gained from phase I (the feasibility study) was used to make necessary changes to the BICS-T protocol. The purpose of this study is to provide survivors of brain injury and caregivers greater support and teach adaptive coping strategies, through a designed and studied a coping skills group specifically for brain injury survivors and their caregivers at the Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana (RHI) called the Brain Injury Coping Skills group (BICS).

Detailed description

Brain injury can be devastating for both patients and family members and can result in chronic difficulties in vocational, social, financial, as well as physical functioning. The occurrence of emotional and neurobehavioral challenges in individuals with brain injury is also common with research consistently showing links between these challenges and a person's overall rehabilitation outcome. Additionally, family functioning and caregiver well-being has been shown to influence rehabilitation outcome for a survivor after brain injury. In fact, individuals with families and caregivers who receive support and services, as well as learn adaptive coping strategies, are less likely to exhibit these marked levels of psychological distress. In order to provide patients and caregivers greater support and teach adaptive coping strategies, the authors of this grant designed and studied a coping skills group specifically for brain injury survivors and their caregivers at the Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana (RHI) called the Brain Injury Coping Skills group (BICS). BICS is a 12 session (one session per week), manualized, cognitive-behavioral treatment group designed to provide support, coping skills, and psychoeducation aimed to improve perceived self-efficacy (PSE) and emotional functioning. Perceived self-efficacy is the belief or confidence in one's ability to deal with the challenges related to a specific situation (e.g., brain injury). PSE has been found to be strongly linked to social participation, increased positive regard toward the caregiving role, and was found to be the greatest contributing factor to predicting life satisfaction. Cicerone and Azulay found that the greatest contribution to predicting life satisfaction was the person's PSE for managing their cognitive challenges. Telemedicine is one possible option for rural patients. With increases in the availability of internet and electronic communication, patients now have immediate access to experts and treatment providers who specialize in brain injury. In fact, results from a needs assessment from Ricker and colleagues in 2002 identified telemedicine as a desired need of the brain injury community. To date, several studies have used telemedicine as an avenue to address brain injury rehabilitation for rural patients and caregivers. For phase II, the objective is to compare the effectiveness of BICS-T with the well-established BICS in-person group. Information gained from phase I (the feasibility study) was used to make necessary changes to the BICS-T protocol.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALBrain Injur Coping Skills - TelemedicineBICS sessions (both in-person and telemedicine) will occur once a week for 12 weeks. Each session will last two hours. Modules of BICS include: Introduction to Brain Injury, Expectations for Recovery, Tips on Managing Challenging Problems, Learning about Depression after the Brain Injury, The 4 R's of Stress Management, Communicating Effectively with Professionals

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-28
Primary completion
2020-08-01
Completion
2020-08-01
First posted
2020-05-13
Last updated
2025-11-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04386655. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.