Effectiveness of a Self-management Program After Traumatic Injury
Managing Symptoms and Disability in the Sub-acute Phase After Traumatic Injury - A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial of a Self-management Support Program
Oslo University Hospital
220 participants
Jan 1, 2024
INTERVENTIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Traumatic injuries, defined as a physical injury with sudden onset, are a leading cause to disability and impaired health. Persons who sustain a traumatic injury often report problems in daily life activities and reduced quality of life, which may limit participation in work/studies, leisure activities and family life. Consequently, complex rehabilitation and support is recommended in National Trauma guidelines due to the often long-lasting physical and psychological sequela of the injury. The main goal of this study is to determine the effectiveness of a self-management support program delivered to persons with a moderate or severe traumatic injury in the sub-acute phase of recovery (i.e. 3-4 months after injury). The self-management program aims to enhance patients' self-efficacy by building skills and self-management strategies to cope with injury-related consequences. The program has a group-based format and consists of eight sessions comprising psychoeducation, skill mastery and sharing of experiences. The participants who will be included in the study must be between 18 and 70 years, be residing in the southeast region of Norway, be admitted to Oslo University hospital or transferred from local hospital within 72 hours after injury, have at least a two-day hospital stay, and be able to read and understand Norwegian language. Participants will be randomly assigned to either intervention or control group. A group of patients will also be able to self-select if they want to receive the self-management support program or be in the control group. The latter is an explorative part of the study to evaluate the influence of patients' treatment-preferences on the study outcomes. Participants in the control group will receive treatment as usual.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria5
- Adults residing in the southeast region of Norway who are aged between 18 and 72 years.
- Admitted to OUH directly or after transfer from local hospitals within 72 hours of injury.
- At least a two-day hospital stay.
- Traumatic injury corresponding to a New Injury Severity Scale score (NISS) \>9.
- Patients reporting injury-related symptoms, functional impairments, and/or difficulties with daily activities at the discharge from OUH.
Exclusion Criteria5
- Cognitive function corresponding to a Mini Mental Status score (MMS) \< 20 points.
- Psychiatric diseases that require treatment.
- Drug/alcohol dependence that require treatment.
- Complete spinal cord injury and isolated thoracic or abdominal injury
- Insufficient command of Norwegian
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Interventions
The SEMPO program is inspired by established self-management principles and established rehabilitation strategies. The program is manualized and integrates components from rehabilitation strategies within relevant functional domains. The program includes elements, such as tailored psychoeducational content, action planning, guided skills mastery, learning and practicing helpful compensatory strategies, problem solving techniques and sharing of experiences. The intervention is delivered by a multidisciplinary team and the participants are provided with written materials and a work book containing information about each session and work tasks.
Treatment as usual
Locations(1)
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NCT06305819