Developing an Online Therapeutic Intervention for Chronic Pain in Veterans

Overview

Chronic pain is a serious concern that disproportionately affects Veterans compared to the general public; Veterans are diagnosed with chronic pain at particularly high rates (47 - 56%) with a 40% greater rate of severe pain than non-Veterans. Veterans with chronic pain face numerous negative functional outcomes, including decreased ability to complete daily work activities, less social support from and closeness with family members, increased chronic health conditions (e.g., cancer, heart disease), and higher mortality compared to Veterans without chronic pain. Given these concerns, there is an urgent need for innovative and integrative approaches for non-medical pain self-management management. Despite the critical importance of effective pain self-management programs, many Veterans with chronic pain do not engage in pain self-management programs. In order to improve Veterans' quality of life, it is important to develop and evaluate innovative, accessible, evidence-based interventions for managing chronic pain. One approach with over twenty years of efficacious treatment for chronic pain is Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Chronic Pain (ACT-CP). ACT is a well-established VA-approved approach to chronic pain management, and focuses on committing to behavior change that reflects personal values, leading to significant improvement in life functioning. ACT- CP is associated with substantial improvements in social/work functioning and decreased pain-related medical visits, as long as three years following treatment. For adults with chronic pain, technology-assisted ACT treatment leads to reduced self-reported pain levels and improved health via changes in value-aligned behaviors and mindfulness. The use of interactive technology-assisted ACT treatment is acceptable and efficacious; however, no ACT for chronic pain online treatment exists for Veterans. The investigators will thus complete a three-phase development, intervention usability and feasibility, and RCT pilot to create a virtual ACT intervention for chronic pain (VACT-CP) for Veterans. VACT-CP will utilize a personalized, social interface to address pain-related distress and functional difficulties of chronic pain (e.g., avoidance, reactivity), using an online Embodied Conversational Agent (ECA) that will walk Veterans through eight weeks of treatment. Studies suggest that the use of such ECAs can increase online-treatment motivation and feedback, resulting in increased treatment compliance and utilization, physical functioning (e.g., increased physical activity and diet fidelity), and client-goal achievement. The primary outcomes for this project will be to (1) develop the VACT-CP user system using feedback from mental health and other clinical professionals treating chronic pain (n = 10), (2) pilot the usability and feasibility of the through iterative usability development and Veteran feedback (n = 12 – 15), and (3) explore the impact of the VACT-CP system in terms of user-experience, functional outcome improvement, and quality of life measures (n = 40).

Study Type

  • Study Type: Interventional
  • Study Design
    • Allocation: Randomized
    • Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
    • Primary Purpose: Treatment
    • Masking: None (Open Label)
  • Study Primary Completion Date: May 30, 2023

Detailed Description

The research study for this career development plan involves the development, iterative user testing, and evaluation of an online ACT treatment program for Veterans with chronic pain. This study will determine whether a larger-scale, more definitive VACT-CP full scale efficacy trial is indicated. Phase 1: Development Phase (15 months): I will develop a detailed VACT-CP protocol for individual online treatment. Treatment techniques will be based on previously-developed ACT treatments for chronic pain, as well as additional ACT training I will obtain during the early phase of the CDA-2. During this phase, mental health and other clinical staff providing pain care at the Bedford VAMC (n = 10) will provide feedback and input on the intervention content. Phase 2: Pilot Evaluation of Intervention Components in Field-Based Iterative Usability Testing (21 months): The investigators will recruit Veterans (n=15) with chronic pain for usability testing, to assess the delivery mode, and utilize an Integrated Technology Acceptance Model to iteratively assess feasibility and usability of the VACT-CP online treatment. This portion of the project will focus on refining the delivery mode, and revising chronic pain intervention content as necessary. With my mentors, I will review the adequacy, utility of specific procedures, and intervention foci to revise the online treatment accordingly. Phase 3: Feasibility Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial (30 months): The investigators will assess the feasibility and acceptability using a Stage 1b RCT pilot test comparing VACT-CP (n = 20) to a wait-list control group (n = 20), including ease of recruitment, retention in each condition, treatment receptivity, attrition and retention in each condition, sustained participation, and the assessment process. The investigators will also describe preliminary data on the impact of VACT-CP vs. the control condition on pain-related functioning related to social, occupational, and physical functioning, emotional functioning, mental health, and quality of life. PHASE 1: INTERVENTION DEVELOPMENT The goal of this phase will be to 1) adapt ACT manualized treatment of chronic pain in Veterans into an online platform using the ECA as the intervention coach, and 2) gather qualitative feedback from chronic pain providers and content experts (n = 10 – 12) on the VACT-CP system for intervention refinement and potential benefits, barriers, referral concerns, and overall thoughts on the VACT-CP system. Initial Development of the VACT-CP System Procedure. The development of the intervention and its revision will be an iterative process over Phases 1 (Intervention Development) and 2 (Feasibility and Usability Testing) (specifications for intervention revision for Phase 2 are below) and will include: 1) reviewing existing ACT CP treatment manuals with mentors; 2) developing a preliminary online version of the intervention, with mentor input, 3) revising the intervention based on mentor and consultant feedback. Creation of the initial VACT-CP platform will include collaboration with mentors , as well as the Northeastern Personal Health Informatics team at Northeastern University led by Dr. Timothy Bickmore. Using input from this team of experts, as well as my own experience in educational technology and online course creation, I will create a basic prototype of the intervention including the main VACT-CP content components, alignment of session goals and outcomes, and the creation of a corresponding patient workbook with information on the system. This process will also include close mentorship between Drs. Kelly and Heapy to assess current ACT for CP manualized treatment, and adaption of this content to the online system. VACT-CP Treatment Content and Structure. The following components will be emphasized in VACT-CP based on previous manualized ACT-chronic pain treatment by Vowles and Sorrell Life with Chronic Pain: An Acceptance-based Approach Therapist Guide and Patient Workbook and utilizing ECA technology to create a personalized, therapeutic experience. Creation of the intervention will entail modification of the ECA image, creation of the intervention scripts and programming for the online user-experience. Participants will receive eight online modules, provided as weekly sessions that will feature an ECA (virtual therapist) as a treatment guide. Adaption to Online Platform. Treatment content for VACT-CP will be integrated into the Northeastern University platform created and maintained by the relational agent research group managed by Dr. Timothy Bickmore, which has already programmed and run several VA-specific, IRB-approved interventions. Dr. Bickmore has confirmed that both the budget and timeline for this project are appropriate, and thus feasible. This website will be available to Veterans for free for this project, and Veterans will be able to re-access the any module where they left off, or restart a module if preferred after logging out using their de-identified username and password provided by research staff. For the purposes of pilot testing with providers and Veterans, the user interface will also first be mocked-up using PowerPoint slides, and following feedback from providers will then be adapted to the current ECA online platform (Phases 1 and 2). This platform will include elements such as personalized conversations with the embodied conversation agent, starting with a mindfulness exercise at the beginning of each module, and moving through major session components. Each session will incorporate different interactive psychoeducation experiences for each session, goal setting and tracking, and finally end with weekly homework aligned with the goals of the next session. Planning for and addressing potential safety concerns online is a major concern, and consultation for the inclusion of safety procedures and information has been provided by Drs. Kelly, Heapy, and Greene. Consequently, in addition to the modules, information regarding the Veteran Crisis Hotline will be incorporated into the website with the addition of a button providing phone number information and the PI's number will be included within the website as well should a Veteran need to access clinical staff. The investigators will also assess with Veterans whether they were able to locate these resources early in the usability and pilot testing. Qualitative Provider Interviews Procedure. A sample of 10 current mental health providers (including social workers, physicians, PACT nurses, and psychologists) who provide treatment for chronic pain at the ENRM VA will be interviewed for formative assessment of the potential benefits, concerns, and institutional VHA dissemination issues for the VACT-CP intervention, using a semi-structured interview guide and a "think-aloud" strategy for intervention review. Sample. Providers will be recruited from presentations and emails to Primary Care/Behavioral Staff and the Mental Health Service Line at the Bedford VAMC, and scheduled for a time for a 45 minute to one hour interview during regular work hours, though potential participants will also have the option to interview over the phone. Participants will be consented for participating in the interview and having their participation audio-recorded. Interview Guide. This interview will include open-ended questions related to palatability of the intervention, feasibility of engagement with Veterans with chronic pain, interest or potential concerns with referring Veterans to such a program, and reactions to a short walk-through of the intervention. The purpose of these questions is to gather information from valuable stakeholders and potential referral-providers on VACT-CP system to address refinement of the program, possible benefits, barriers, referral concerns, and overall thoughts on the VACT-CP system Questions for palatability are based on the "organizational perspective" components of the Practical, Robust Implementation and Sustainability Model (PRISM). Interviews will be audio recorded and transcribed. Provider Interview Analyses Qualitative data analysis will use a thematic approach for the data related to the goal of ascertaining intervention palatability and feasibility and referral issues, and a narrative approach for data collected with the goal of intervention refinement. Two independent reviewers will code Section 2 of the interview transcriptions using open-ended coding. Each element will be summarized separately, and overall summary themes will be generated. Summary tables of key points will be generated, similar to previous formative assessments performed. These tables will ensure data saturation has been reached for both provider input. Two reviewers will analyze qualitative data using a modified grounded coding to identify themes using audio recordings after each interview. Intervention areas will be modified as feedback is given. Each set of interviews will take place with 3 - 4 participants, to allow for iterative adjustment of the intervention based on feedback. Number of changes needed for each intervention area will be tracked, and less intervention refinement will be anticipated by the end of the interview cycle. However, if intervention palatability is not achieved, further testing using other providers will be utilized. The generated information and themes will be utilized for development and refinement of the VACT-CP intervention, to learn from major stakeholders important areas for potential revision during intervention development. PHASE 2: FEASIBILITY AND USABILITY TESTING The goals of Phase 2 are to: 1) gain further feedback on the VACT-CP treatment by gathering information from Veterans via usability testing to; 2) assess Veteran interest, satisfaction, and usability of the online VACT-CP treatment; 3) iteratively address any technological concerns. This Phase will allow for feedback and preliminary support that the Phase 3 small-pilot RCT is merited. Given past research suggesting that similar interventions are usable and beneficial, the investigators anticipate that usability findings suggesting concerns or places for revision will not be such a strong barrier that the intervention will not be at all useful in this population. However, should Phase 2 data indicate that a small-pilot RCT is not merited, the usability information from this Phase will be utilized to inform further VACT-CP refinement until the usability bugs have been worked out and the system is ready for testing in a feasibility pilot RCT. This information will also be disseminated to inform future online chronic pain treatment development. Sample Information Sample Size: No single participant reviewer can identify all the usability problems in a system; typically 3-5 reviewers can identify 80% of the usability problems, with diminishing returns from additional reviewers per round of testing. The investigators will conduct 3 rounds of usability testing with 4-5 Veterans per round to assess and iteratively address usability concerns (n=12-15 total). Recruitment. Subjects will be 15 patients primarily recruited by referral from the Primary Care Behavioral Health at the ENRM VA Hospital. Eligible participants will have a current diagnosis of non-cancer chronic pain, defined as related to either Musculoskeletal pain or Joint Problems/Osteoarthritis or presence of chronic pain of at least mild to moderate severity. The investigators have decided to target joint and musculoskeletal pain as these have been shown to best respond to psychological, behavioral interventions, whereas neuropathic pain and headaches having less research supporting this. However, the investigators will not exclude for other diagnoses of pain, as this is typical and would not necessarily preclude Veterans from benefiting from the treatment. The investigators have verified that there are 2,605 Veterans who were seen over the past year (i.e., having had at least two appointments for pain) at the Bedford VA with chronic, non-cancer pain concerns, suggesting that the recruitment goal of 15 Veterans within 3 months to do a single-session usability test for Phase 2 is achievable. In addition, I will give presentations to primary care providers, social workers, and mental health clinicians at the Bedford VA to enhance recruitment. Using CPRS, Veterans meeting eligibility criteria for chronic pain seen within 12 months at the Bedford VA will also be sent letters inviting them to participate. Screening Procedures. Callers will be screened by phone. Eligible participants will be scheduled for an in-person assessment with the PI, who will confirm study eligibility and obtain informed consent. A research associate affiliated with the research study will then conduct clinician-rated assessments, and subjects will complete self-report measures. Feasibility and Usability Assessment Procedures Eligible Veterans will come to the Bedford VA to complete baseline demographic and health measures. Following baseline assessment, Veterans will be provided with an iPad that will walk them through different portions of the user interface and treatment set-up, during which time they will be asked questions and recorded as a usability interview. Specifically, different images for options of the virtual therapy guide, as well as a PowerPoint with information about the user interface will be shown. Next, Veterans will be provided with written instructions for use, and do a behavioral walk-through of how to use the online system. Patients will be given instructions on interacting with the system, and will then walk through a portion of the treatment using PowerPoint slides that will simulate the VACT-CP treatment and usability interface, and then complete the Usability Survey and SUS (see measures below). During this time, the Veterans will take part in a contextual interview wherein Veterans move through the system unguided and are observed and asked questions about their experience. After this, additional, open-ended questions will be asked regarding Veteran preferences. For purposes of feedback and iterative program development, the Veteran will only be provided with the part of the first VACT-CP session during this time. The participant will then be left in a secure, confidential room to walk through the VACT-CP system on their own, during which time their use of the system will be recorded. Approximately 4 – 5 Veterans will be recruited and participate in this usability testing at a time, with 3 different usability testing arms, in order to allow for time to iteratively address any functionality issues or concerns with the user interface. Following this walkthrough, participants will be provided with measures of demographics, usability and health information technology use, including a retrospectively worded version of the Usability Survey items (e.g., I enjoyed using the VACT-CP program) and a semi-structured qualitative exit interview. Participants will receive compensation for their in-person visit, which should take approximately 2 – 3 hours. Assessment Measures A broad range of reliable and valid measures will be used to provide an assessment of chronic pain difficulties, demographic information, and technology use, technology interest, and comfort. In addition, Veterans will be observed while interfacing with the VACT-CP system, recorded, and asked questions by the interviewer. This will consist of specific questions related to the different parts of the system the veteran interacts with (e.g., the ECA design, structure of the modules, feedback system) as well as more open-ended when not provided with specific cues (e.g., what are you trying to get to from this page, what could be better about how this page is set up, etc.) Questions will be open-ended in nature, and address the extent of any problems with accessing and using the VACT-CP treatment online, how they might perceive the usefulness or importance of VACT-CP focal areas of treatment, whether they would recommend this treatment to a fellow Veteran, and any problems or concerns they may have with using the VACT-CP program. Using this additional, open-ended interview protocol, the investigators will also inquire as whether they would be interested in using the VACT-CP treatment at home and the role of their virtual therapist in the patient's interest in the treatment, and about past strategies or tools the patient used to address their chronic pain issues and whether the VACT-CP treatment might seem more useful than prior options or strategies. Finally, participants will be asked to indicate what, if any, changes they would make to the treatment to assist in self-management of their chronic pain. This will also include assessing their interest in it complementary and alternative methods of pain management (stretching, yoga, progressive muscle relaxation, etc.) to assess if it would be useful and feasible to add these options to the platform later if desired. The interview will be video recorded and coded to look for similar themes, difficulties, revisions, and strengths of the system. Intervention Revisions During Phase 2, in which Veterans will interact with the VACT-CP online treatment, the investigators will: 1) gather feedback from Veterans regarding acceptability and usefulness of the treatment, 3) gather and analyze complementary data from SUS-8, 4) address any technological issues as they arise, and 5) examine preliminary data from this phase of the study. Modifications to the treatment will be based upon: 1) acceptability and feasibility of the online treatment, and 3) qualitative feedback obtained from patients, therapist, and mentors. Individual feedback sessions at the end of phase 2 will be held to gather information for refining the treatment manual and make it acceptable to patients. The investigators anticipate that the Veteran intervention reviewers might miss bugs or other user interface problems, and anticipate that some revisions to the online system and program may need to be made for Phase 3. For instance, one potential issue that may arise might be an inability for the Veteran to read the text on the tablet screen. After receiving this information during an initial feedback round, the researchers will amend the program with a potential solutions i.e. text size or text color being altered, with the revised version then being piloted in the next round of Veteran user testing. Some usability challenges will be addressed with introductory handouts/tutorial materials/orientation to the program at the beginning of the intervention session. In addition, large organizational issues will be discussed before moving on to platform refinement. Data Management Patient files will be kept in a locked cabinet and password protected files where data will be encoded with ID numbers. IDs will be unrelated to any identifying information. Video recordings will be stored on a secure, VA approved server. The majority of data analysis will consist of qualitative and observational methods, including coding qualitative interview data and coded video files. Data will be checked for inconsistencies, omissions and errors. As only 15 subjects will participate in Phase 2, only summary quantitative statistics will be computed to describe the sample and to determine outcome on the study measures. Data gathered through qualitative interviews and quantitative measures will be housed on a VA-approved cloud-based data storage server. Data Collection and Analysis Qualitative Combined Usability and Contextual Interview. The investigators will focus on usability and feasibility to address Aim 2. During 60-75-minute usability sessions held in private, secure rooms SoCRR rooms within the Bedford VAMC, participants will assess the usability of the VACT-CP intervention using a "think-aloud protocol", verbalizing their thoughts as they navigate the website. After a period of exploration with the site, the research staff will use a pre-created protocol to ask Veterans to perform a series of tasks on the website (i.e., entering therapy goals, accessing the different modules, completing pre-session assessment, interacting with the virtual therapist). The usability testing space is already equipped with a computer, tablet, and a web camera. As a participant navigates the intervention website on a tablet or computer, their actions will be recorded through webcam electronically, and Dr. Reilly will observe the actions in real-time within the room, and a blinded observer/note taker. Drs. Waring and Quigley will consult on usability testing procedures. The video recordings and notes made by Dr. Reilly during user testing will be transcribed and analyzed using NVivo software available through the Bedford VAMC. A modified consensual qualitative research (CQR) approach will be utilized to code the transcribed videos, which Dr. Reilly has been trained in and utilized in past peer-reviewed publications. CQR can be particularly useful in allowing for a team of coders to identify themes arising in both structured and more open-ended interview moments. Dr. Reilly will develop an initial codebook for using in coding based on the key activities and questions in the user-testing protocol. Dr. Reilly and the research associate will then employ the codebook in identifying usability-themes within the videos, with an additional research staff identified to act as a code auditor. According to CQR, the following processes occur to allow for depth and breadth in describing the shared experiences of participants: (b) two coders utilize the initial codebook throughout the data analysis process to foster multiple perspectives; (c) consensus is researched between coders about the meaning of the data; (d) at least one auditor must check the work of the primary team of judges and minimize potential bias; and (e) domains and themes are reported in terms of the frequency of arising themes. Themes will then be categorized according to the following CQR groupings: general (include all or all but one of the cases), typical (include more than half of the cases up to the cutoff for general), and variant (at least two cases up to the cutoff for typical). Specifically, the themes generated by this qualitative data will be used to identify user performance measures, errors and difficulties, and tasks that do not meet acceptable criteria, and general trends and categories of users' behavior such as how well users can complete an assigned task on the VACT-CP system and where they are encountering problems. Using this method, the investigators will classify all general comments regarding usability as necessary to include in iterative development, while variant and typical will be discussed within the research group to decide upon potential ways to incorporate this feedback into intervention refinement. In addition, Veterans will complete a series of brief usability questionnaires following user testing and the qualitative interview. Usability Survey and SUS data will be input into REDCap, reported descriptively using SPSS software, and used to describe Veteran's general perceptions and opinions of the technology's usability, both within the controlled testing setting and for future use within their home. This feedback will then be triangulated with qualitative data, and used to iteratively refine the VACT-CP program between the three waves of user testing. The investigators will complete this process with 4-5 Veterans per round; Dr. Reilly then summarize suggested changes, obtain input from the full mentoring team, then meet with Dr. Bickmore's staff to implement potential changes. Results will be published to inform other researchers about usability findings related to format feedback, user interface, interest, and perceptions of behavioral intervention content. PHASE 3: FEASIBILITY PILOT RCT The goals of the feasibility pilot RCT study phase are to conduct a Stage 1b RCT pilot trial to: 3a) explore relationships between Veteran traits, usability beliefs, and technology perceptions on intended and actual use of the VACT-CP system; 3b) describe differences in VACT-CP versus a wait-list control group on pre- and post-test measures of pain acceptance, pain level, pain-related functioning, and quality of life, treatment satisfaction with the VACT-CP system and ACT-related outcomes including pain acceptance, valued living and experiential avoidance; 3c) evaluative the relative feasibility and acceptability of the VACT-CP intervention procedure and waitlist control, including ease of recruitment, retention in each condition, treatment receptivity, attrition and retention in each condition, sustained participation, and the assessment process. A total of 40 Veterans will be enrolled to test the VACT-CP system within their home. Participant Selection and Recruitment Sample Size: Based on the previous recruitment of Veterans with chronic pain at the Bedford VAMC, the investigators estimate that approximately 65% of Veterans screened for participation by research staff, recruitment letters, flyer recruitment, and referrals from PCBH staff (N=60 enrolled participants) will meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria and be eligible for the pilot trial. Similar to Phase 2, the investigators will not exclude for other diagnoses of pain. Given this, the investigators will aim to recruit a total of 60 participants over fifteen months total to allow for the desired final 40 participants screened as eligible and randomized into the pilot RCT study, specifically aiming for recruiting 3-4 participants per month. Subjects for the proposed study will be recruited over the course of approximately 15 months and be screened according to their presence of chronic pain and other important. Subjects will be recruited from the Bedford VAMC, where 2,605 Veterans are currently (as of November, 2017) being seen at the Bedford VAMC for chronic, non-cancer pain concerns, suggesting that the investigators' final recruitment goal of 40 persons total enrolled (1.5% of the total Bedford population) is feasible. In addition, I will give presentations to primary care providers, social workers, and mental health clinicians at the Bedford VA to enhance recruitment. Using CPRS, Veterans meeting eligibility criteria for chronic pain seen within one month at the Bedford VA will also be sent letters inviting them to participate. Study Procedures and Assessment Treatment Procedures. Following recruitment, a research associate not otherwise involved in the study will screen participants prior to enrollment. Veterans will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio, with a research staff member utilizing and keeping the schedule. Veterans randomized to VACT-CP will receive 8 online-module based weekly sessions of treatment via personal computer or provided tablet with wireless accessibility at the Bedford VAMC. Veterans in the waitlist control will be provided with a list of common pain resources at the Bedford VAMC. The VACT-CP program will be housed on a secure web server through Northeastern University, with no Veteran private health information collected by the system. If during Phase 2 it becomes clear that more or less sessions are necessary (based on indicators previously discussed for usability and feasibility testing), the number of sessions for Phase 3 will be changed accordingly. Veterans in both conditions will complete the assessment battery (including all measures below, except for the treatment satisfaction and working alliance inventory) at baseline. In addition, the full battery will be taken at mid-point of the intervention phase (4 weeks) and at the end, immediately following the treatment (8 weeks). Veterans will be tracked in terms of their post-referral treatment engagement (e.g., enrolling in any of the pain-resource options on the handout). In addition, a research associate will call the Veteran at weeks 3 and 6 and conduct a brief safety assessment and qualitative interview with Veterans assess for potential suicidality, usability issues, and participant health and well-being.

Interventions

  • Behavioral: Veteran Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Chronic Pain
    • Seven online modules based on the theoretical framework of ACT for chronic pain, provided as weekly sessions that will feature an ECA (virtual therapist) as a treatment guide. The initial module is devoted to an explanation of the treatment rationale, initial psychoeducation on pain-related symptoms, pain interference, and focal concepts of ACT, and assessment of individual pain symptoms. Modules 2-4 will focus on values clarification, acceptance and willingness, mindfulness, with an emphasis on tolerance of pain-related experiences. Modules 5-7 will continue to this focus, and incorporate goal-creation and committed action exercises. Module 8 will consolidate and provide feedback on goal-related achievements, and will focus on planning for the future.

Arms, Groups and Cohorts

  • No Intervention: Waitlist Control Group
    • Veterans in the waitlist control will be provided with a list of common pain resources at the Bedford VAMC.
  • Experimental: VACT-CP Group
    • Veterans randomized to VACT-CP will receive 7 online-module based weekly sessions of treatment via personal computer or provided tablet with wireless accessibility at the Bedford VAMC.

Clinical Trial Outcome Measures

Primary Measures

  • System Usability Scale (SUS)
    • Time Frame: Post-Intervention, at 8 weeks
    • The SUS is a 10-item measure, scored on a 5-point Likert scale from Strongly Disagree (1) to Strongly Agree (5), that assesses human-computer interaction. The SUS generates a subjective evaluation score using a globally accepted scale and to understand if the system in its current form is sufficiently usable. To calculate the SUS score, first sum the score contributions from each item. Each item’s score contribution will range from 0 to 4. For items 1,3,5,7,and 9 the score contribution is the scale position minus 1. For items 2,4,6,8 and 10, the contribution is 5 minus the scale position. Multiply the sum of the scores by 2.5 to obtain the overall value of system usability. SUS scores have a range of 0 to 100, with higher scores suggesting greater system usability. A SUS score above 58 is regarded as above average, and a SUS score above 80 is regarded as high and a score above which participants are likely to recommend the product to friends.
  • Usability Survey
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • The usability survey items are drawn from a questionnaire developed by Wilson and Lankton (2004) to measure a range of health information technology areas. Each item is scored on a 7 point Likert scale where 1 = strongly disagree and 7 = strongly agree. There are 8 subscales: 1. Satisfaction with Medical Care Scale (3 items, range 3 – 21); 2. Health Knowledge Scale (2 items, range 2 to 14); 3. Internet Dependence Scale (4 items, range 4 to 28); 4. Information-seeking Preference Scale (4 items, range 4 to 28); 5. Intrinsic Motivation Scale (3 items, range 3 to 21); 6. Perceived Ease of Use Scale (3 items, range 3 to 21); 7. Perceived Usefulness: Extrinsic Motivation Scale (3 items, range 3 to 21); 8. Behavioral Intention to Use E-health Scale (2 items, range 2 – 14). For each scale, items are summed, with higher score indicating greater levels of satisfaction, knowledge, dependence, information preference, motivation, ease of use, usefulness, and intention to use the system.

Secondary Measures

  • Pain Outcomes Questionnaire – VA (POQ – VA)
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • A 19-item inventory that assesses patient’s ability to engage in functional activities related to daily living that may be impacted by pain interference, with the scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 10 (all the time). The scale provides a total score based on the summation of 6 subscales: Pain (1 item, range 0 to 10); Mobility (4 items; range 0 to 40); ADL (4 items, range 0 to 40); Vitality (3 items, range 0 to 30); Negative Affect (5 items, range 0 to 50); and Fear (2 items, range 0 to 20). Higher scores on the POQ-VA indicate higher levels of pain interfering with quality of life.
  • The Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire (CPAQ)
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • A 20-item survey measuring recognition of pain as not negating the ability to live valued, meaningful life. The survey includes two subscales: the Activity Engagement subscale (11 items, range 0 to 77) and Pain Willingness (9 items, range 0 to 63). To score the CPAQ, add the items for Activity Engagement and Pain Willingness to obtain a score for each factor. To obtain the total score, add the scores for each factor together. Higher scores indicate higher levels of acceptance.
  • Multidimensional Experiential Avoidance Questionnaire (MEAQ)
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • A 62-item self-report measure of experiential avoidance, including subscales on Behavioral Avoidance (11 items, range 11 to 66), Distress Aversion (13 items, range 13 to 78), Procrastination (7 items, range 7 to 42), Distraction & Suppression (7 items, range 7 to 42), Repression & Denial (13 items, range 13 to 78), and Distress Endurance (11 items, range 11 to 66). The scale for all items ranges from 1 (strong disagree) to 6 (strongly agree). Greater scores within each subscale indicate greater levels of the named construct. A total score can be obtained with the following calculation: Behavioral Avoidance + Distress Aversion + Procrastination + Distraction & Suppression + Repression & Denial + (77 – Distress Endurance).
  • The Chronic Pain Values Inventory (CPVI)
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • A 12-item self-report measure of the extent to which the patient is living in accordance with their values in areas such as work, health, and family, which is related to lower perceived disability and pain-related anxiety, as well as greater reported patient functioning even in the context of high levels of pain. Respondents are asked to rate each item on a scale from 0 (not at all important /successful) to 5 (extremely important / successful). Two primary scores are obtained in scoring the CPVI – an Importance subscale (6 items, range 0 to 6) and a Success subscale (6 items, range 0 to 6). Using these two scale, two scores are calculated; The first is a mean success rating, taken as the average of the 6 success ratings (range 1 to 6). The second score is a mean discrepancy rating, taken as the mean of the differences between importance and success (range 0 to 6), with higher scores indicating greater discrepancy between importance and success.
  • Pain Numeric Rating Scale
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • The Veteran will be asked to rate their current level of pain using a 11-item pain intensity scale from 0 (no pain at all) to 10 (extreme pain). This is a single-item score, which ranges from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating greater levels of reported pain.
  • Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8 (CSQ-8)
    • Time Frame: Through study completion (pre and post), on average 8 weeks
    • This 8-item scale produces a single total score, with higher scores indicating greater levels of global satisfaction, perceived quality, and effectiveness of a treatment. Individual items are rated on a scale from 1 (low satisfaction) to 4 (high satisfaction), with the total CSQ-8 score obtained by averaging the items answered (range 0 to 4).

Participating in This Clinical Trial

Inclusion Criteria

  • Current diagnosis of non-cancer chronic pain, defined as: – at least one pain-related diagnosis indicated by an ICD-9 or -10 code related to either Musculoskeletal pain or Joint Problems/Osteoarthritis – or presence of chronic pain of at least mild to moderate severity as indicated by two or more NRS pain scores of 4 at three separate VA outpatient visits in past year based on a CPRS record review; – Has a working, high-speed wireless internet connection at home, or is willing to access sessions either at the Bedford VAMC by using a tablet in a secure space – Competent to provide written informed consent Exclusion Criteria:

  • Any current or lifetime DSM-5 psychotic disorder – Current or recent (within 1 month of study entry) DSM-5 alcohol or drug use disorder – [Current use of any other chronic pain-related behavioral or psychological treatment] – Any cognitive impairment that would interfere with study participation – Clinically significant suicidality within the past year – Presence of any clinical features requiring a higher level of care (inpatient or partial hospital treatment) – Any cognitive or physical impairment that would interfere with study participation of using a tablet/computer and providing feedback

Gender Eligibility: All

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Maximum Age: N/A

Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted: No

Investigator Details

  • Lead Sponsor
    • VA Office of Research and Development
  • Provider of Information About this Clinical Study
    • Sponsor
  • Overall Official(s)
    • Erin D. Reilly, PhD, Principal Investigator, VA Bedford HealthCare System, Bedford, MA

References

Reilly ED, Kathawalla UK, Robins HE, Heapy AA, Hogan TP, Waring ME, Quigley KS, Drebing CE, Bickmore T, Volonte M, Kelly MM. An Online Acceptance and Mindfulness Intervention for Chronic Pain in Veterans: Development and Protocol for a Pilot Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2023 Mar 7;12:e45887. doi: 10.2196/45887.

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