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The purpose of this single-arm trial is to determine the feasibility of emotional awareness and expression therapy (EAET) for individuals with persistent pain following orthopedic trauma. As part of this study, participants will be asked to attend weekly EAET treatment sessions and complete assessments (including pre-treatment, post-treatment, and follow-up) consisting of questionnaires and sensory testing procedures.
Full description
Orthopedic trauma, resulting in severe injuries such as multiple fractures or amputation, occurs in approximately 3 million people annually in the United States; about half of these people experience persistent pain and psychological distress (depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD] symptoms) 6 to 12 months post injury. Pain and distress exacerbate one another, are likely to persist, and relate to disability: half of patients report substantial disability 7 years post trauma. Medical interventions such as surgery promote survival; however, there is an urgent need to develop targeted psychological interventions to treat these disabling symptoms.
Few psychological interventions are available to treat pain and distress following orthopedic trauma. Emotional Awareness and Expression Therapy (EAET) is an 8-week psychological intervention recently developed for chronic pain conditions characterized by central sensitization. EAET is unique in treating pain and mood by targeting emotion regulation processes related to traumatic life events. Such events are ubiquitous following orthopedic trauma and recent findings show that EAET results in improvements in pain and mood; thus, it may be uniquely effective to address the needs of orthopedic trauma survivors. However, there are documented barriers to implementing psychological interventions in this population, so the feasibility of EAET is unknown. The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility of delivery and assessment of EAET for orthopedic trauma survivors with persistent pain in a single-arm trial. As part of this study, participants will be asked to do the following things:
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Inclusion criteria
One or more acute orthopedic injuries
The patient sustained an orthopedic injury including, but not limited to:
Initial admission to the trauma or orthopedic center/service of the participating hospital OR all necessary screening and patient characteristic data available in medical record (determination based on information available at time of enrollment)
18 years old or older
Received operative fixation for at least one acute orthopaedic injury at a participating hospital. Patients should be recruited at the time of primary injury, not revision or complication surgery
Average Brief Pain Inventory Score > 3/10
Presence of pain most days (> 3 days/week) for past three months
Exclusion criteria
peri-prosthetic fractures of the femur (regardless of etiology)
non-ambulatory due to an associated spinal cord injury
non-ambulatory pre-injury
currently pregnant
moderate or severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), as evidenced by intracranial hemorrhage present on admission CT
major amputation(s) of the upper or lower extremities
non-English speaking
Likely to have severe problems with maintaining follow-up for any of the following reasons:
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Rachel Aaron, PhD; Stephen Wegener, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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