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Hypnotic Cognitive Therapy Reduce Acute & Chronic SCI Pain in Inpatient Rehabilitation
Sponsor: University of Washington
Summary
Chronic spinal cord injury (SCI) pain is complex and difficult to treat. For individuals with SCI, pain often begins early in the course of their SCI and continues longitudinally. Unfortunately, SCI-related pain is frequently not responsive to medical treatment and medical treatments that are available and commonly used, such as opioids, have negative side-effects and risk of addiction. Nonpharmacological (non-medication) interventions to reduce chronic pain show promise both for individuals with SCI as well as other chronic pain conditions. Research on psychological interventions for chronic pain over the past two decades has consistently found these interventions to be more effective than no treatment, standard care, pain education, or relaxation training alone. However, many of these interventions are designed and implemented in outpatient settings after chronic pain has already developed. The development of early, effective, and preventative interventions to reduce the development of chronic pain has the potential to vastly improve quality of life for individuals with SCI. Having demonstrated the feasibility and acceptance of this treatment in an earlier study, the purpose of this randomized clinical trial is to compare the treatment of Hypnosis Enhanced Cognitive (HYPCT) therapy to Pain Education (ED) for reducing acute and chronic pain for individuals with new spinal cord injuries. The main goals of the study are to: * Aim 1: Test the effectiveness of HYPCT during inpatient rehabilitation for SCI compared to a ED for reducing current pain intensity. * Aim 2: Determine the post-intervention impact of HYPCT sessions compared to ED on average pain intensity. Participants will be asked to: * Complete 4 surveys over seven months * Complete pre and post treatment pain assessments for each of 4 treatment/control sessions Participants will be assigned to one of two groups for treatment and receive either: * 4 Hypnotic Cognitive therapy sessions or * 4 Pain Education sessions
Official title: Hypnotic Cognitive Therapy During Inpatient Rehabilitation to Reduce Acute & Chronic SCI Pain: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - 85 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
88
Start Date
2023-09-18
Completion Date
2026-05-15
Last Updated
2024-12-13
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Hypnosis enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy
This therapy entails subjects being induced into a state of relaxation and the receiving cognitive behavioral therapy for pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Pain Education
This therapy entails subjects learning about the causes, mechanisms, and ways to reduce pain associated with a new spinal cord injury.
Locations (1)
Harborview Medical Center
Seattle, Washington, United States