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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| Uppsala University | OTHER |
| Linnaeus University | OTHER |
| Ă–rebro University, Sweden | OTHER |
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Overall project aim: to develop, evaluate, and implement a digital behavioural health treatment to improve well-being in individuals with chronic pain.
The treatment will be integrated into the nationally available 1177 web-platform, which will facilitate long-term use in clinical practice across Sweden. Within the project, the investigators will develop the digital treatment and match it to patients' needs using focus groups; pilot the treatment to evaluate its feasibility and acceptability, preliminary efficacy, and individual change processes using the single case experimental design (SCED) method; conduct a two-armed randomized controlled trial enhanced with SCED to assess the clinical effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and maintenance of change of the treatment compared to treatment as usual; and monitor the implementation process of the treatment through a business model and stakeholder interviews.
Study 1: Identifying and meeting patients' needs Design: Focus groups with individuals with chronic pain and health care professionals. Aim: To identify participant's needs and utilise user input to match the treatment content and design (prototype 1.0) to needs. Sample: People with chronic pain (two focus groups, n=6-8 per group), health care professionals (HCPs) (e.g., psychologists, psychotherapists trained in cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)) (one focus group, n=6-8) will be recruited from primary care facilities in the region of Kalmar. Data collection: Focus groups will follow a semi-structured guide and be audio- and video-taped. Field notes will furthermore provide insights into relevant cues and observations given by participants. Outcome: Intervention prototype 2.0 Time plan: Autumn/winter 2021.
Study 3: Feasibility, acceptability, preliminary efficacy, and individual change processes Design: Piloting and optimising the treatment in an iterative process with 4-6 smaller cohorts; user input from each optimisation 'sprint' will be integrated and tested in the subsequent cohort/ sprint; single-case experimental design (SCED) method with randomised baseline length, pre- post- and FU-assessment and post-treatment user interviews. Aim: To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability, the preliminary efficacy, and individual change processes of the digital behavioural health treatment within the 1177 web-platform. Sample: People with chronic pain (n=10 per sprint; total of n=60) will be recruited from primary care facilities in the region of Kalmar; the feasibility and acceptability will also be evaluated in treating HCPs (note: one HCP might treat multiple patients at the same time, and also take place in several sprints), who are therefore also considered participants. Data collection: feasibility/ acceptability: semi-structured debriefing interviews of subjective experience combined with objective measures such as drop-out rate, adherence, system-generated technical use e.g. number of log-in time points, number of modules completed; preliminary efficacy: Pre-, post- 3- and 6-month FU-assessment of self-reports on patients' well-being, data of n=60 patients accumulated across all sprints as the treatment remains functionally constant across all optimisation studies; individual change processes: Lunch and evening reports of well-being at least four times per week over the course of the 6-week treatment using a digital diary, also comparing to the baseline and post-treatment diary assessments. Time plan: 2022.
Study 4: RCT enhanced with SCED evaluating the (cost-) effectiveness and maintenance of change Design: Two-armed RCT enhanced with randomized baseline length SCED method comparing the digital behavioural health treatment to primary care treatment as usual (TAU). Aims: To evaluate the clinical effectiveness of the treatment on behavioural health outcomes, and the cost-effectiveness of the treatment in comparison to TAU. Sample: Patients (n=360, n=180 per group) will be recruited from pain clinics and primary care facilities in the region of Kalmar and potentially other regions (e.g., Östergötland, Jönköping, Stockholm, Uppsala, Örebro). Data collection: Self-report questionnaires will be completed over pre-, post- FU-assessments. Furthermore, the digital diary information on daily well-being will be collected at all assessment time points and over the course of the intervention, in both treatment arms. To determine the cost-effectiveness, information from registers on sick leave, medication, and health care consumption will be used . Time plan: 2023-2024.
Study 2 (pre-Implementation) and study 5 (post-implementation): business model, determinants, and lessons-learned Design: Qualitative study using interviews with stakeholders; deductive analysis of qualitative data mapped on the consolidated framework for implementation research. Aim: Identify barriers and facilitators for the prospective implementation of the treatment and prepare the implementation process using a business model canvas (at baseline, study 2); review the actual use and implementation process at follow-up to present lessons learned (at follow-up, study 5). Sample: Various stakeholders identified via snowball-sampling (e.g., development team and facilitators of 1177 web platform at region Kalmar, health care professionals, health care managers, municipality representatives). Interviews will be conducted until data satisfaction is achieved. Data collection: An initial version of a business model canvas will be discussed with the development team and health care managers. Furthermore, potential barriers and facilitators of prospective use will be identified at baseline via a semi-structured interview with the stakeholders. The practical use and implementation status after the treatment is released to the market (here also referred to as follow-up (FU)) will be described using semi-structured interviews to understand the process retrospectively and present lessons learned. Time plan: baseline autumn 2021, FU in autumn 2024 (after RCT, treatment release to other regions).
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| DAHLIA treatment | Experimental | 6 weeks of online behavioural treatment; mainly self-guided and weekly contact with their therapist |
|
| Treatment as usual | Other | receive usual treatment at their rehabilitation centre; detailed information will be collected to define what treatment as usual means in clinical settings. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DAHLIA treatment | Behavioral | 6 weeks; CBT/ ACT/ process-based treatment; micro-learning format with 4 digital micro-sessions per week; exposure as the core process; guidance to be OPEN, AWARE, ACTIVE; weekly contact with therapist; booster sessions after 2- and 4 months; |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change over time in Catastrophizing | Subscale of coping strategies questionnaire (CSQ), 6-items rated on a 7-point scale, with higher scores indicating higher levels of catastrophizing | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in (Dis)ability/ pain screening | Ă–rebro Musculoskeletal Pain Screening Questionnaire (Ă–MPSQ), 10 items rated on a 10-point scale, higher scores indicating higher levels of functioning | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Work ability | Work ability index (WAI), 10 items rated on different scales (0-10 points, 5-point scale, categorical ratings); no total score but individual information that can be translated into an index or analysed individually | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Functioning | Brief pain inventory (BPI-SF), 9 items, question 3-9 rated on a 10-point scale, higher scores indicating greater levels of pain interference | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change over time in Well-being/ depression | Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), 10 items rated on a 4-point scale, with higher scores indicating greater levels of depressive symptoms | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Perceived stress |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change over time in being Open/ Acceptance | Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire (CPAQ), 6 items rated on a 7-point scale, with higher scores indicating greater levels of pain acceptance | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in being Aware |
Inclusion criteria
Participant must fulfil the following:
Exclusion criteria:
Participant may not
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Sara Laureen Bartels, PhD | Karolinska Institutet | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Psykisk hälsa | Kalmar | Sweden | ||||
| Rehab Söder |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35428645 | Derived | Bartels SL, Johnsson SI, Boersma K, Flink I, McCracken LM, Petersson S, Christie HL, Feldman I, Simons LE, Onghena P, Vlaeyen JWS, Wicksell RK. Development, evaluation and implementation of a digital behavioural health treatment for chronic pain: study protocol of the multiphase DAHLIA project. BMJ Open. 2022 Apr 15;12(4):e059152. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059152. |
| Label | URL |
|---|---|
| Research group website | View source |
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As part of prospective publications, anonymised data will be made available.
The study protocol will be published in a scientific journal in 2022. Analytic plans, codes, and data sets will be shared with prospective publications in 2023.
Data, codes, and plans will be shared through publications. Other researchers may furthermore reach out to get access as a collaboration to additional data sets.
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D059350 | Chronic Pain |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D010146 | Pain |
| D009461 | Neurologic Manifestations |
| D012816 | Signs and Symptoms |
| D013568 | Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D013812 | Therapeutics |
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Focus groups (n=16 patients and n=8 health care professionals); single-arm, iterative sprints with n=10 patients per sprint (total of n=40-60 patients); two-armed RCT with n=180 patients per arm; interviews with stakeholders (minimum of n=6 interviews)
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During the RCT data analysis, the researcher will be blinded (not knowing the participants treatment group).
| Treatment as usual | Other | Usual pain treatment; defined post-hoc based on what patients receive |
|
Perceived stress scale (PSS), 10 items rated on a 5-point scale, with higher scores indicating greater levels of perceived stress |
| Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Sleep problems | Insomnia Severity Index (ISI), 4 items rated on a 5-point scale, with higher scores indicating greater levels of sleeping problems | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
5 items rated on a 5-point scale, on,'acting with awareness' from the Five Facets MindfulnessQuestionnaire (FFMQ), with greater scores indicating higher levels of awareness |
| Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in being Engaged/ committed action | i) Valueing questionnaire (10 items); (ii) Committed action questionnaire (8 items); all items rated on a 7-point scale, with higher scores indicating greater levels of engagement/ committed behaviour | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Psychological flexibility | Swedish translation of the Multidimensional psychological flexibility inventory (MPFI), 24 items rated on a 6-point scale with higher scores indicating grater levels of psychological flexibility | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Self-efficacy | general self-efficacy scale (S-GSE), 10 items rated on a 4-point scale, with lower scores indicating greater levels of self-efficacy | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Pain self-efficacy | Pain self-efficacy questionnaires (PSEQ-2), 2 items rated on a 7-point scale with higher scores indicating greater levels of pain self-efficacy | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Change over time in Avoidance | Avoidance subscale of Psychological Inflexibility in Pain Scale (PIPS), 8 items rated on a 7-point scale with higher scores indicating greater levels of pain-related avoidance | Pre-post treatment (meaning Baseline and week 7), 3- and 6-month FU |
| Kalmar |
| Sweden |
| Samrehab | Kalmar | Sweden |
| Capio St Görans Hospital | Stockholm | Sweden |