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Clinical Trial
A brief peer support intervention for veterans with chronic musculoskeletal pain: a pilot study of feasibility and effectiveness.
- Marianne S Matthias, Alan B McGuire, Marina Kukla, Joanne Daggy, Laura J Myers, and Matthew J Bair.
- VA HSR&D Center for Health Information and Communication, Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Regenstrief Institute, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Department of Communication Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
- Pain Med. 2015 Jan 1; 16 (1): 818781-7.
ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to pilot test a peer support intervention, involving peer delivery of pain self-management strategies, for veterans with chronic musculoskeletal pain.DesignPretest/posttest with 4-month intervention period.MethodsTen peer coaches were each assigned 2 patients (N = 20 patients). All had chronic musculoskeletal pain. Guided by a study manual, peer coach-patient pairs were instructed to talk biweekly for 4 months. Pain was the primary outcome and was assessed with the PEG, a three-item version of the Brief Pain Inventory, and the PROMIS Pain Interference Questionnaire. Several secondary outcomes were also assessed. To assess change in outcomes, a linear mixed model with a random effect for peer coaches was applied.ResultsNine peer coaches and 17 patients completed the study. All were male veterans. Patients' pain improved at 4 months compared with baseline but did not reach statistical significance (PEG: P = 0.33, ICC [intra-class correlation] = 0.28, Cohen's d = -0.25; PROMIS: P = 0.17, d = -0.35). Of secondary outcomes, self-efficacy (P = 0.16, ICC = 0.56, d = 0.60) and pain centrality (P = 0.06, ICC = 0.32, d = -0.62) showed greatest improvement, with moderate effect sizes.ConclusionsThis study suggests that peers can effectively deliver pain self-management strategies to other veterans with pain. Although this was a pilot study with a relatively short intervention period, patients improved on several outcomes.Published [2014]. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.
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