Grant to be used in Development of Support Program for Traumatic Brain and Spinal Cord Injury Patients, Families

SPOKANE, Wash. — Bruce Becker, M.D., and Dennis Dyck, Ph.D., are recipients of a $450,000 grant to develop a first-of-its-kind support program for people with spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury and their families. The program is modeled after similar work done with families of people with schizophrenia led by Dyck, director of the Washington Institute for Mental Illness Research and Training and associate dean for research at Washington State University Spokane.

The grant, which was awarded by the National Institute of Disabilities and Education Research, will be used for the development of a multiple family group (MFG) intervention program for spinal cord and traumatic brain injury patients and their families. The structured management strategy is intended to help patients and their families cope with injury by providing information about the injury, and resources and suggestions for managing problems and issues, such as social isolation, altered family mechanics, depression and economic strain.

Dyck, who just completed a five-year schizophrenia study funded by the National Institutes of Health, believes the MFG intervention will have similar benefits for persons with brain and spinal cord injury. Dyck and colleages found that the two-year MFG schizophrenia intervention improved symptoms, medication management and reduced hospitalizations. Moreover, family caregivers benefited by showing reduced distress, anger expression, and depression, and they went to the doctor less often. “Based on my experience with MFG, I’m convinced that this psychoeducational intervention will similarly assist patients and their families who are coping with traumatic brain injury and spinal cord injury in their lives,” Dyck said.

“The goal of the project is to develop strategies and educational materials to assist patients and their families in adapting to the many problems presented by spinal cord injury and brain injury. We hope this project will result in methods which will greatly reduce family stresses and improve internal family problem-solving capabilities, helping improve long-range patient and family health,” said Becker, medical director of St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Institute, a division of Inland Northwest Health Services.

MFG intervention has been extensively tested in the management of chronic schizophrenia and has recently been adapted to other medical conditions, including cancer and diabetes. The strategy brings together groups of six to eight families with two MFG group clinician/facilitators to support and teach families and patients about the disease process and management strategies. Although the intervention has been highly effective in the treatment of these medical conditions, it has never been used to manage traumatic brain injury or spinal cord injury.

As part of the new program development project, Becker and Dyck will establish two spinal cord injury and two traumatic brain multifamily groups and will adapt measures previously studied in schizophrenia. The project will result in the development of multi-family group treatment manuals specific to spinal cord and brain injuries, as well as the training of MFG clinicians.

Web sites:
Washington Institute for Mental Illness Research and Training: www.wimirt.spokane.wsu.edu
St. Luke’s Rehabilitation Institute: www.stlukesrehab.org
Inland Northwest Health Services: www.inhs.org
WSU Spokane: www.spokane.wsu.edu

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