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A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality

About a third of strokes cause aphasia, or language loss, with profound consequences for the person’s social participation and quality of life. These problems may be mitigated by group social support. But this intervention is not available to all individuals. This study investigated whether it is fe...

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Autores principales: Marshall, Jane, Devane, Niamh, Talbot, Richard, Caute, Anna, Cruice, Madeline, Hilari, Katerina, MacKenzie, Gillian, Maguire, Kimberley, Patel, Anita, Roper, Abi, Wilson, Stephanie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7514104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32970784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239715
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author Marshall, Jane
Devane, Niamh
Talbot, Richard
Caute, Anna
Cruice, Madeline
Hilari, Katerina
MacKenzie, Gillian
Maguire, Kimberley
Patel, Anita
Roper, Abi
Wilson, Stephanie
author_facet Marshall, Jane
Devane, Niamh
Talbot, Richard
Caute, Anna
Cruice, Madeline
Hilari, Katerina
MacKenzie, Gillian
Maguire, Kimberley
Patel, Anita
Roper, Abi
Wilson, Stephanie
author_sort Marshall, Jane
collection PubMed
description About a third of strokes cause aphasia, or language loss, with profound consequences for the person’s social participation and quality of life. These problems may be mitigated by group social support. But this intervention is not available to all individuals. This study investigated whether it is feasible to deliver group social support to people with aphasia via a multi-user, virtual reality platform. It also explored the indicative effects of intervention and the costs. Intervention aimed to promote wellbeing and communicative success. It enabled participants to form new social connections and share experiences of living with aphasia. It comprised 14 sessions delivered over 6 months and was led by community based co-ordinators and volunteers. Feasibility measures comprised: recruitment and retention rates, compliance with intervention and assessment of treatment fidelity. Effects of intervention were explored using a waitlist randomised controlled design, with outcome measures of wellbeing, communication, social connectedness and quality of life. Two intervention groups were randomised to an immediate condition and two were randomised to a delayed condition. The main analysis explored scores on the measures between two time points, between which those in the immediate condition had received intervention, but those in the delayed group had not (yet). A comprehensive approach to economic data collection ensured that all costs of treatment delivery were recorded. Feasibility findings showed that the recruitment target was met (N = 34) and 85.3% (29/34) of participants completed intervention. All groups ran the 14 sessions as planned, and participants attended a mean of 11.4 sessions (s.d. 2.8), which was 81.6% of the intended dose. Fidelity checking showed minimal drift from the manualised intervention. No significant change was observed on any of the outcome measures, although the study was not powered to detect these. Costs varied across the four groups, from £7,483 - £12,562 British Pounds Sterling ($10,972 - $18,419 US dollars), depending on travel costs, the relative contributions of volunteers and the number of hardware loans that were needed. The results suggest that a larger trial of remote group support, using virtual reality, would be merited. However the treatment content and regime, and the selection of outcome measures should be reviewed before conducting the trial. Trail registration: Study registered with ClinicalTrials.gov; Identifier: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/NCT03115268.
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spelling pubmed-75141042020-10-01 A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality Marshall, Jane Devane, Niamh Talbot, Richard Caute, Anna Cruice, Madeline Hilari, Katerina MacKenzie, Gillian Maguire, Kimberley Patel, Anita Roper, Abi Wilson, Stephanie PLoS One Research Article About a third of strokes cause aphasia, or language loss, with profound consequences for the person’s social participation and quality of life. These problems may be mitigated by group social support. But this intervention is not available to all individuals. This study investigated whether it is feasible to deliver group social support to people with aphasia via a multi-user, virtual reality platform. It also explored the indicative effects of intervention and the costs. Intervention aimed to promote wellbeing and communicative success. It enabled participants to form new social connections and share experiences of living with aphasia. It comprised 14 sessions delivered over 6 months and was led by community based co-ordinators and volunteers. Feasibility measures comprised: recruitment and retention rates, compliance with intervention and assessment of treatment fidelity. Effects of intervention were explored using a waitlist randomised controlled design, with outcome measures of wellbeing, communication, social connectedness and quality of life. Two intervention groups were randomised to an immediate condition and two were randomised to a delayed condition. The main analysis explored scores on the measures between two time points, between which those in the immediate condition had received intervention, but those in the delayed group had not (yet). A comprehensive approach to economic data collection ensured that all costs of treatment delivery were recorded. Feasibility findings showed that the recruitment target was met (N = 34) and 85.3% (29/34) of participants completed intervention. All groups ran the 14 sessions as planned, and participants attended a mean of 11.4 sessions (s.d. 2.8), which was 81.6% of the intended dose. Fidelity checking showed minimal drift from the manualised intervention. No significant change was observed on any of the outcome measures, although the study was not powered to detect these. Costs varied across the four groups, from £7,483 - £12,562 British Pounds Sterling ($10,972 - $18,419 US dollars), depending on travel costs, the relative contributions of volunteers and the number of hardware loans that were needed. The results suggest that a larger trial of remote group support, using virtual reality, would be merited. However the treatment content and regime, and the selection of outcome measures should be reviewed before conducting the trial. Trail registration: Study registered with ClinicalTrials.gov; Identifier: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/NCT03115268. Public Library of Science 2020-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7514104/ /pubmed/32970784 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239715 Text en © 2020 Marshall et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Marshall, Jane
Devane, Niamh
Talbot, Richard
Caute, Anna
Cruice, Madeline
Hilari, Katerina
MacKenzie, Gillian
Maguire, Kimberley
Patel, Anita
Roper, Abi
Wilson, Stephanie
A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title_full A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title_fullStr A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title_full_unstemmed A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title_short A randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: A Novel application of virtual reality
title_sort randomised trial of social support group intervention for people with aphasia: a novel application of virtual reality
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7514104/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32970784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0239715
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