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Effects of PSTon Mental Health Outcomes in Caregivers of Post-9/11 Combat Veterans With a Traumatic Brain Injury

D

Duquesne University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Brain Injuries, Traumatic
Military Family

Treatments

Behavioral: Problem-Solving Thearpy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT03211884
W81XWH-16-1-0690

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of PST for positively impacting distressed military family caregiver's depression and burden levels (secondary outcomes), ultimately enhancing their mental health quality of life (QOL, primary outcome).

Full description

Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is considered the "signature injury" of recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, with 22% of returning troops experiencing a TBI. After receiving acute and rehabilitative healthcare services, combat veterans with a TBI (active Service Members and Veterans) are typically cared for at home, by their female (79%) parent (62%, 32% spouses), and the majority (60%) of these caregivers receive little or no help from others with their caregiving responsibilities. Not only is TBI a well-documented risk factor for dementia of the Alzheimer's type (AD) later in life, noteworthy similarities exist between the experiences of family caregivers of Veterans with TBI and caregivers of civilians with AD. Symptoms of a TBI are very similar to AD and include cognitive impairment (deficits in memory, language, attention, and/or planning), difficulty communicating, poor impulse control, and poor emotion regulation. Both conditions necessitate adaptation to emotional and behavioral changes in the injured family member, and personality changes may result in relationship strain between the injured person and his or her family caregiver. Similar to AD, symptoms of a TBI do not lessen over time, are often perceived as burdensome, and are associated with negative mental health outcomes in their family caregivers. Similarly, both AD and TBI family caregivers report additional stressors (e.g., continuous monitoring for unpredictable behaviors and their consequences) when cohabitating with the impaired or injured family member for an extended period of time.

Objective/Hypotheses: To improve the mental health of family caregivers of post-9/11 combat veterans with a TBI, the proposed study is designed to evaluate the efficacy of an evidence-based, short-term (9, 60-mintue session), solution-focused, self- management intervention utilizing problem-solving therapy (PST) to lessen burden and depression levels, and improve the quality of life (QOL) in co-residing family caregivers of combat veterans with a TBI (military family caregivers). PST is based on the premise that real-life problem-solving plays an important role as a mediator of the relationship between stressful life events and negative mental health outcomes. When deficits in problem-solving lead to ineffective coping attempts, under high levels of stress exposure, burden and depression is likely to ensue. Building on our previous work with caregivers of civilians with mild cognitive impairment (a proposed precursor for AD) and early-stage AD, it is hypothesized that military family caregivers receiving PST training will endorse lower levels of caregiving burden and depression, and improved mental health QOL, at each follow-up assessment, than caregivers in the comparison (usual care) group.

Specific Aims: The primary aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of PST for positively impacting distressed military family caregiver's burden, and depression levels, ultimately enhancing their mental health QOL (primary outcomes). Data will also be collected to characterize physical and social stressors for these caregivers such as illness that limits the caregiver's activities, new household management and caregiving responsibilities, satisfaction with social roles and activities, lifestyle constraints, the quality of the marital relationship, perceived social support, and demographic factors. A secondary aim of the proposed study is to determine which of a series of key caregiver sociodemographic factors moderate PST- intervention efficacy for caregiving burden and mental health QOL outcomes.

Study Design: A randomized controlled trail design (intention-to-treat model) will be used to evaluate the effects of an individualized PST-based intervention on burden, mental health, and well-being outcomes in family caregivers of combat veterans with a TBI. We expect to enroll and randomize 100 family caregivers of Veterans with a TBI from the Joint Forces Explosive Ordnance Disposal (the disarming and disposal of bombs) Warrior Foundation and Boulder Crest Retreat for Wounded Warriors family caregiver websites. Caregivers assigned to the PST group will receive nine PST training sessions (each approximately 60 minutes) delivered face-to-face every two weeks (to allow time for problem solving efforts and scheduling conflicts) using study-specific webcams (part of the Study Welcome Kit). Software will be utilized that permits recording and saving of intervention sessions for review (to ensure treatment fidelity over time). Outcomes will be collected through the Internet (to enhance the study's sustainability and scalability) and measured baseline, and at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-mos. post-intervention.

Study Relevance: Since family caregivers constitute the largest group of adult care providers in the United States and the market value of family caregiving exceeds that spent on formal health and nursing home care, the mental health and well-being of family caregivers of Veterans with a TBI - and their subsequent ability to assist wounded Veterans at home (e.g., prevent institutionalization of injured/impaired Veterans) - is of paramount importance. If the PST-based intervention reduces burden levels and improves mental health aspects of QOL in military family caregivers, the data will be used to lay the foundation for offering PST- based mental health services for distressed family caregivers of Veterans with a TBI through the VA Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers.

Enrollment

149 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Screen positive for caregiving burden

Lives with a post-9/11 Veteran or Service Member with a combat-related traumatic brain injury

Communicates in English

No exclusion criteria

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

149 participants in 2 patient groups

Problem-solving therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Couched within Bandura's social-cognitive theory, self-management refers to the process by which individuals accept responsibility for and take action to change their behaviors, obtain knowledge related to their situation (e.g., behavioral manifestations of a TBI) through increased awareness and use of effective personal resources (e.g., skill in every-day problem-solving). This ultimately enhances the caregivers' confidence that they can cope with caregiving and behavior-related stressors in the care recipient.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Problem-Solving Thearpy
Usual Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Usual care was defined as various military caregiver organizations, support groups and services available to all family caregivers of combat Veterans (e.g., Military OneSource; Operation We Are Here; Veterans Administration Program of Comprehensive Assistance for Family Caregivers; American Red Cross Military and Veteran Caregiver Network; Project New Hope; Wounded Veteran Family Care; Women for Wounded Warriors).

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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