iCanCope With Pain: A Smartphone and Web Self-management Program for Adolescents and Young Adults With Chronic Pain
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
Chronic pain in adolescents and young adults (AYA, aged 15-25) is a common problem. Pain that is not treated properly can reduce quality of life. Programs to help AYA learn to live with and manage pain are very important. Our team is developing a smartphone application (app) and website for AYA with chronic pain. The app will help AYA to track pain, sleep, mood, activities, and exercise and help AYA set and achieve goals. The website will give information about pain and how to manage it independently. We will build the program and make sure it is easy to use and understand. We will also test if the program can be put into practice as planned and if AYA using the program feel less pain, have less limitations, and a better quality of life.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
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N/A |
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
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Experimental: iCanCope app and website Intervention: Behavioral: iCanCope app and website |
Behavioral: iCanCope app and website
In addition to standard medical care, adolescents and young adults in the experimental group will receive access to the "iCanCope with Pain" smartphone app and website for 8 weeks. The app consists of daily pain symptom tracking (pain intensity, sleep, mood, physical activity, and fatigue), goal setting, in-the moment coping strategies, as well as a social community component. The website provides chronic pain-specific education, self-management strategies, and resources.
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Active Comparator: Attention control group Intervention: Behavioral: Attention control group |
Behavioral: Attention control group
The control group is designed to control for the potential effects on outcomes of time, attention, smartphone and computer use during the intervention. In addition to standard medical care, adolescents and young adults in the attention control group will receive access to the "iCanCope with Pain" smartphone app (control version, with limited functionality), and a pain resource website without access to self-management strategies.
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Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Participant Accrual and Dropout Rates [8 weeks]
This will be centrally tracked by the clinical research project coordinator (CRPC).
- Intervention fidelity [8 weeks]
Any issues or difficulties encountered during implementation of the intervention, control strategy, or outcome measures will be tracked throughout the study by the CRPC.
- Acceptability and Satisfaction [8 weeks]
Participants in the intervention arm will complete the Acceptability e-scale (AES) post-intervention. In addition, a subset of participants from the intervention group will be offered to participate in a qualitative feedback interview to further explore acceptability and satisfaction of the intervention.
- Engagement with Intervention [8 weeks]
Google Analytics will track patterns of app and website usage.
- Adherence [8 weeks]
Adherence will be determined using Google Analytics.
Secondary Outcome Measures
- Pain intensity and interference [8 weeks]
Measured using the short form Brief Pain Inventory (BPI), a 15-item tool that measures pain intensity and impact on functioning.
- Self-efficacy [8 weeks]
Measured with the Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (PSEQ), a 10-item scale that requires patients to take their pain into account when rating their self-efficacy beliefs.
- Emotional Functioning [8 weeks]
Measured using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), a 14-item measure for the assessment of anxiety and depressive symptoms.
- Sleep Functioning [8 weeks]
Measured with the Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), a 7-item self-report questionnaire for assessing the nature, severity, and impact of insomnia.
- Social Functioning [8 weeks]
Measured with the Perceived Social Support from Friends (PSS-Fr) Scale, a 20-item scale that assesses the extent to which an individual perceives that their friends fulfill their needs for support.
- Health-Related Quality of Life [8 weeks]
Measured using the SF-36 Health Survey, a 36-item self-report scale with 8 subscales (Physical Functioning, Role-Physical, Bodily Pain, General Health, Vitality, Social Functioning, Role-Emotional, and Mental Health).
- Patients' Global Impression of Change [8 weeks]
Measured using the PGIC scale, a single item rating by participants of their perceived change during the trial.
- Pain-Related Knowledge [8 weeks]
Measured using a modified version of the Medical Issues, Exercise, Pain and Social Support (MEPS) questionnaire, a 27-item measure.
- Health Care Utilization [8 weeks]
Measured using the Chronic Pain Healthcare Utilization Form. (modified from the Ambulatory and Home Care Record)
- Adverse effects [8 weeks]
Will be tracked using the adverse event form.
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
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Diagnosed with chronic pain of at least 3 months duration according to medical chart
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Able to speak and read English
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Willing and able to complete online measures
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Participants are active patients at pain clinic at one of the respective participating study sites
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Have access to an Internet-connected computer according to self-report.
Exclusion Criteria:
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Moderate to severe cognitive impairments, as assessed by reviewing medical chart and consultation with the patient's healthcare provider
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Major co-morbid psychiatric (e.g. conversion disorder, depression, anxiety disorder) illness that may impact patient's ability to understand and use the iCanCope with Pain intervention via self-report, as determined by their health care provider
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Patient from the department of haemology/oncology
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Participated in the Phase 2B iCanCope usability study
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Requires urgent CBT treatment as per their health care provider
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Individuals who have received more than 4 CBT sessions for pain management in the past 6 months, as per their health-care provider and self-report
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
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1 | Alberta Children's Hospital | Calgary | Alberta | Canada | T3B 6A8 |
2 | Stollery Children's Hospital | Edmonton | Alberta | Canada | T6G 2B7 |
3 | University of Alberta | Edmonton | Alberta | Canada | T6G 2R7 |
4 | Nova Scotia Health Authority/Dalhousie University | Halifax | Nova Scotia | Canada | B3H 2E1 |
5 | IWK Health Centre | Halifax | Nova Scotia | Canada | B3K 6R8 |
6 | Hamilton Health Sciences | Hamilton | Ontario | Canada | L8N 3Z5 |
7 | The Ottawa Hospital | Ottawa | Ontario | Canada | K1H 8L6 |
8 | Mount Sinai Hospital | Toronto | Ontario | Canada | M5G 1X5 |
9 | Hospital for Sick Children | Toronto | Ontario | Canada | M5G 1X8 |
10 | University of Saskatchewan | Saskatoon | Saskatchewan | Canada |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- The Hospital for Sick Children
- Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada
- IWK Health Centre
- Nova Scotia Health Authority
- Stollery Children's Hospital
- University of Alberta
- Dalhousie University
- Centre for Global eHealth Innovation
- University of Toronto
- University of Saskatchewan
- Alberta Children's Hospital
- The Ottawa Hospital
- Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
Investigators
None specified.Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- 1000047495