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Knee osteoarthritis (OA) affects 27 million US adults and is a leading cause of pain and disability. Non-pharmacological interventions are recommended but are underutilized. Exercise reduces pain and improves physical function, but benefits tend to wane without a component to facilitate behavior change. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has long term benefits on pain and physical function in individuals with OA, but is not typically offered in clinical care. CBT could be taught in the context of clinical care by occupational therapists (OT). OTs help people manage chronic conditions by teaching behavioral strategies that promote health and function. The purpose of this study is to test the feasibility and efficacy of an OT-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy program to help people manage their knee OA.
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Knee OA, in particular, is a major driver of health care costs and is also a leading cause of arthritis-related activity limitations. A common assumption in knee OA treatment is that relief of joint pain will lead to improvements in physical function. However, many factors can influence disability in OA, not only the biomechanical factors which have been the focus of traditional rehabilitation. Although research supports a broader biopsychosocial approach to knee OA treatment, it has not been broadly adopted into clinical treatments. The biopsychosocial model posits that pain and disability are not only affected by pathophysical (e.g., biological) factors, but also psychological (e.g., depression, coping, self-efficacy) and social factors (e.g., social support, response of significant other).
One approach to offering psychosocial aspects in the context of pain treatment has been via CBT, a common psychosocial intervention, with evidence supporting its efficacy in OA. Despite the evidence, CBT is rarely integrated into actual clinical practice for people with knee OA. Barriers to integration have included limited access to psychologists (particularly in rural settings), difficulties coordinating primary care physicians with psychological practices, inconsistent reimbursement of psychological services for OA pain, and inconsistent standardization of treatments across settings. The current study aims to overcome barriers that have previously limited access to a biopsychosocial approach to knee OA treatments by integrating cognitive and behaviorally-based self-management training into a new rehabilitation intervention offered through occupational therapy, an allied medical field which commonly teaches behavioral strategies to improve physical function in many clinical populations. Because this approach will be manualized, it will provide the opportunity for easy adoption into clinical practice.
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57 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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