scholarly journals Predictors of engagement in an internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy program for veterans with chronic low back pain

Author(s):  
Chelsey Solar ◽  
Allison M Halat ◽  
R Ross MacLean ◽  
Haseena Rajeevan ◽  
David A Williams ◽  
...  

Abstract Internet-based interventions for chronic pain have demonstrated efficacy and may address access barriers to care. Participant characteristics have been shown to affect engagement with these programs; however, limited information is available about the relationship between participant characteristics and engagement with internet-based programs for self-management of chronic pain. The current study examined relationships between demographic and clinical characteristics and engagement with the Pain EASE program, a self-directed, internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy intervention for veterans with chronic low back pain (cLBP). Veterans with cLBP were enrolled in a 10 week trial of the Pain EASE program. Engagement measures included the number of logins, access to coping skill modules, and completed study staff-initiated weekly check-in calls. Regression analyses were conducted to identify significant predictors of engagement from hypothesized predictors (e.g., race/ethnicity, age, depressive symptom severity, and pain interference). Participants (N = 58) were 93% male, 60.3% identified as White, and had a mean age of 54.5 years. Participants logged into the program a median of 3.5 times, accessed a median of 2 skill modules, and attended a median of 6 check-in calls. Quantile regression revealed that, at the 50th percentile, non-White-identified participants accessed fewer modules than White-identified participants (p = .019). Increased age was associated with increased module use (p = .001). No clinical characteristics were significantly associated with engagement measures. White-identified race/ethnicity and increased age were associated with greater engagement with the Pain EASE program. Results highlight the importance of defining and increasing engagement in internet-delivered pain care.

2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Keisuke Shimizu ◽  
Kazuhide Inage ◽  
Sumihisa Orita ◽  
Yawara Eguchi ◽  
Yasuhiro Shiga ◽  
...  

AbstractThis study examined the factors that inhibit the therapeutic effects of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and clarify the adaptation judgment criteria of CBT. We included patients with chronic low back pain and allocated them to the adaptation (with visual analog scale [VAS] improvement) or non-adaptation group (without VAS improvement). The patients were analyzed using various psychological tests. CBT improved depressive symptoms and catastrophic thinking; however, they were not correlated with the VAS and did not directly affect low back pain improvement. The non-adaptation group showed an unexplainable/vague sense of anxiety; an excessive focus on searching for pain; a strong intimacy desire; a strong tendency of medical dependency; and fantasy or distortion of the actual experience, especially self-image. Moreover, the patients showed a low ability to objectively express or attribute meaning to pain due to poor language skills, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, and emotional value judgment. Individuals with the aforementioned characteristics of pre-CBT psychological tests should select a different treatment approach given the high poor-adaption possibility. Even patients with depressive or anxious symptoms are not necessarily adaptable for CBT. Therefore, pre-CBT tests for treatment suitability are necessary. Future studies should establish a protocol for psychotherapy suitable for the non-adaptation group.


2012 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 139-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mutsuhiro Nakao ◽  
Yasuko Shinozaki ◽  
Nyryan Nolido ◽  
David K. Ahern ◽  
Arthur J. Barsky

Pain ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 157 (11) ◽  
pp. 2434-2444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith A. Turner ◽  
Melissa L. Anderson ◽  
Benjamin H. Balderson ◽  
Andrea J. Cook ◽  
Karen J. Sherman ◽  
...  

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