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Brief Title: Multimedia Training for Family Caregivers in Use of Touch and Massage in Supportive Cancer Care
Official Title: Couples and Cancer: Building Partner Efficacy in Caring
Study ID: NCT00632398
Brief Summary: RATIONALE: A multimedia education program for family caregivers that teaches simple methods of touch and massage for the comfort of cancer patients at home may be effective in lowering stress, reducing symptoms, and improving quality of life for patients; and may improve caregiver satisfaction and self-efficacy. PURPOSE: This randomized phase II trial is studying how well multimedia instruction of caregivers in use of touch and massage works for cancer patients and their care partners.
Detailed Description: OBJECTIVES: Primary * Produce a multimedia program to deliver instructional content in massage for cancer patients and their lay care partners. * Determine the effects of the multimedia program on care partner esteem and stress and on the frequency and duration of the care partner's provision of their assigned form of support to the patient. * Determine the effects of the multimedia program on patient symptom levels, functional quality of life, perceived stress, and physiologic indices of stress. Secondary * Examine the impact of the multimedia program on care partner concerns about use of touch as a form of support, and on self-efficacy in massage. OUTLINE: * Multimedia program production and screening (year 1): Patient/care partner dyads representative of a broad spectrum of relationships participate in filming a multimedia program about massage, acupressure, light touch, and massage safety precautions. The multimedia program is titled, "Massage for People with Cancer: Simple Instruction for Family and Friends." The program comprises a menu-driven DVD which allows the viewer to select English or Spanish as well as individual chapters of content, and a manual keyed to the DVD content. A different set of diverse patient/care partner dyads screen and critique the multimedia program. * Randomized controlled study of program's efficacy (year 2): Patient/care partner dyads who reside in the same home are recruited. Dyads within each race/ethnic group are stratified by patient total scores on the baseline FACT-G assessment. Dyads are then randomized to 1 of 2 arms. * Arm I (experimental intervention): Dyads attend an orientation meeting with other dyads of their language group in order to meet the Oncology Massage Therapist (OMT) and research assistant (RA) assigned to them during the study; watch the DVD together and discuss it afterward; receive instructions for weekly data collection; and receive explanation about the safety monitoring home visit and the bi-weekly phone monitoring. Instructions for data collection include instructions for the care partner to fill out a sample of the weekly Study Report card. Dyads are given the DVD and manual to take home, and those who do not have a DVD player are provided one. Dyads complete at least one massage over at least 20 minutes once a week for 20 weeks in which they provide the techniques demonstrated in the film. An OMT makes a home visit to each dyad during the first 2 weeks, and then as needed, to monitor for understanding of and adherence to the relevant safety precautions for the given patient. Dyads receive bi-weekly telephone monitoring from an RA in order to encourage compliance with the weekly activity and monitor for any adverse events or safety concerns that warrant another home visit by the dyad's OMT (e.g., changes in medical treatment that call for changes in precautions). * Arm II (control intervention): For 4 weeks, care partners spend at least 20 minutes a week alone with the patient, reading to the patient from literature of interest to the patient. The literature may be fiction, non-fiction, or poetry that does not contain news or stressful subject matter. Dyads receive telephone monitoring from their RA within the first week and then every 2 weeks thereafter to encourage compliance, monitor for any adverse events or concerns, and respond to questions about the project. At the end of the 4 weeks, dyads attend an orientation meeting with the Principal Investigator, OMTs, and RAs. At this meeting, dyads view the multimedia program and discuss precautions and any other issues that may affect their utilization of the instruction. Dyads are then given the multimedia program to take home, and a DVD player if they need one. A home visit by an OMT is scheduled to assure the dyad understands and implements relevant safety precautions. The dyads then participate in the use of the intervention for the remaining 16 weeks of the study. All participants in the study complete quality of life, perceived stress, and other questionnaires at baseline and then at 4, 12, and 20 weeks. Demographic and patient medical information is also collected. Saliva samples are collected from patients at baseline and then at 4, 12, and 20 weeks to monitor cortisol and DHEA levels.
Minimum Age: 21 Years
Eligible Ages: ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Sex: ALL
Healthy Volunteers: No
Collinge and Associates, Kittery, Maine, United States
Greater Boston Chinese Golden Age Center, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Latin American Health Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Name: William Collinge, PhD, MPH
Affiliation: Collinge and Associates, Inc.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR