Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The Comfort Ability is a fun and interactive one-day (6 hour) program to help children and their parents or caregivers learn how to better manage chronic pain. The program introduces cognitive-behavioral and bio-behavioral pain management strategies to emphasize the mind-body connection and offers non-invasive and non-pharmaceutical strategies for improved pain management. Youth ages 11-18 with chronic or recurrent pain are eligible to sign up for Comfort Ability.
Full description
This 1-day, manualized clinical intervention includes a parent group and an adolescent group that run simultaneously, but separately. This program will be offered 4 times per calendar year. The program is 6-hours long and was run at an urban, Midwest children's hospital on a weekend day to maximize accessibility for families. Each group will include between 8 and 12 adolescents (ages 11-17 years) and 15-21 parents. The groups will be staffed by two PhD-level psychologists (one for the parent and one for the adolescent group), a psychology postdoctoral fellow, and nurse practitioner, one or two trained study assistants (e.g., psychology interns, nurse coordinator) who provide support, but not intervention content.
The adolescent program includes motivational interviewing, psychoeducation, and structured activities that emphasize the link between pain, negative cognitions (i.e., catastrophizing), avoidance behaviors, and mood. About one third of the day is devoted to in vivo practice of relaxation-based skills including diaphragmatic breathing, guided imagery, pain-reduction visualization, and biofeedback. Additionally, adolescents participate in several hands-on activities designed to enhance mind-body regulation including mindfulness practice (eating mindfully), art therapy, and aromatherapy. Adolescents complete interactive workbooks throughout the program; at the end of the day, each adolescent works one-on-one with staff to create a written and personalized pain management plan emphasizing the adaptive coping strategies each adolescent preferred during the day. Adolescents were additionally provided with a pain management tool kit inclusive of recorded relaxation exercises, a biofeedback card, and other small tools to enhance their pain management regimen.
The parent program includes psychoeducation regarding pain in the context of adolescent development, didactic and vignette-based practice of an adaptive parent communication response style (i.e., reflective listening), and concrete tools for setting up behavior plans to scaffold an adolescent's return to function for school, sleep, daily activities, and exercise. All parents are provided with a take-home workbook inclusive of neuroscience and psychoeducational materials as well as a list of resources to further solidify the information they learned.
In addition there will be peer support for parents and adolescents in this program. During the 1 day intervention families and youth will be encouraged to share discussions regarding their health journeys. A guest speaker will be invited to both groups sharing their experiences and journey of utilizing psychologically based interventions to assist with reducing pain and stress and associated disability. These speakers have not received training for this portion.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
13 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Anne LaBarge, RN, CPNP
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal