A Randomized Controlled Trial of Holistic Neuropsychologic Rehabilitation After Traumatic Brain Injury
Presented preliminary results at the Annual Meeting of the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine, October 9, 2007, Washington DC.
Abstract
Cicerone KD, Mott T, Azulay J, Sharlow-Galella MA, Ellmo WJ, Paradise S, Friel JC. A randomized controlled trial of holistic neuropsychologic rehabilitation after traumatic brain injury.
Objective
To evaluate the effectiveness of comprehensive, holistic neuropsychologic (NP) rehabilitation compared with standard, multidisciplinary rehabilitation for people with traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Design
Randomized practical controlled trial.
Setting
Postacute brain injury rehabilitation center within a suburban rehabilitation hospital.
Participants
Participants with TBI were recruited from clinical referrals and referrals from the community. Sixty-eight participants who met inclusion criteria were randomly allocated to treatment conditions. Most participants (88%) had sustained moderate or severe TBI, and greater than half (57%) were more than 1 year postinjury at the beginning of treatment.
Interventions
Treatment was conducted 15 hours per week for 16 weeks. Standard neurorehabilitation consisted primarily of individual, discipline specific therapies (n=34). Intensive cognitive rehabilitation emphasized the integration of cognitive, interpersonal, and functional interventions within a therapeutic environment (n=34).
Main Outcome Measures
Primary outcomes were the Community Integration Questionnaire (CIQ) and Perceived Quality of Life scale (PQOL). Secondary outcomes included NP functioning, perceived self-efficacy, and community-based employment.
Results
NP functioning improved in both conditions. Intensive cognitive rehabilitation participants showed greater improvements on the CIQ (effect size [ES]=0.59) and PQOL (ES=0.30) as well as improved self-efficacy for the management of symptoms (ES=0.26) compared with standard neurorehabilitation treatment. These gains were maintained at the 6-month follow-up. Standard neurorehabilitation participants showed improved productivity at the 6-month follow-up associated with the need for continued rehabilitation.
Conclusions
Improvements seen after intensive cognitive rehabilitation may be related to interventions directed at the self-regulation of cognitive and emotional processes and the integrated treatment of cognitive, interpersonal, and functional skills. The results show the effectiveness of comprehensive holistic NP rehabilitation for improving community functioning and quality of life after TBI compared with standard rehabilitation.
aDepartment of Cognitive Rehabilitation, JFK-Johnson Rehabilitation Institute, Edison, NJ
bDepartment of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, JFK-Johnson Rehabilitation Institute, Edison, NJ
Reprint requests to Keith D. Cicerone, PhD, 2048 Oak Tree Rd, Edison, NJ 08820
Supported by the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (grant no. H133A020518).
No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on the authors or on any organization with which the authors are associated.