Identifying Cognitive Barriers to Effective Pressure Ulcer Self-Care

Abstract

Pressure ulcers (PU, or “bedsores”) cause a substantial psychosocial and health burden to the spinal cord injury (SCI) patient and result in significant healthcare costs. These costs are higher in individuals who exhibit poor preventative PU self-care. Paralyzed individuals have an unrelenting requirement of proactive action to prevent a PU or to heal a PU. They must exert certain effort in the present, such as by frequently shifting positions and visually inspecting skin, in order to prevent an uncertain negative outcome in the future (a new PU or a current PU failing to heal). Therefore, having an impulsive “live in the now” cognitive style could be especially problematic for individuals with SCI to stay on top of their PU prevention and self-care. Impulsivity is defined as “acting without thinking” on short time-scales, as excessive risk-taking, or as a myopic preference for small but immediate rewards over larger but delayed rewards. Elevated impulsivity has been shown to increase risk for addictions, obesity, poor medication compliance and other treatment adherence in other health areas. However, the role of impulsivity in SCI health outcomes is not well-known. For example, while doctors assume that smoking increases risk of PU because smoking impairs circulation, it is not known whether some of the relationship between smoking and poor PU outcomes is because a core mental under-appreciation of the future and of penalties underlies both decisions to keep on smoking as well as to give minimal effort on PU self-care. In response to the Peer Reviewed Medical Research Program (PRMRP) Topic Area on pressure ulcer (prevention), this study will administer iPad tasks to objectively measure several kinds of impulsivity in SCI outpatients who either smoke, binge drink, or use cannabis. These tests will determine whether cognitive preferences revealed in brief decision-making and behavioral inhibition tasks are prognostic of poor PU prevention and self-care, and whether these tasks show differences between SCI patients who do versus do not regularly smoke, drink, or use cannabis. Collecting impulsivity information along with substance use information may also provide initial evidence that part of the linkage between poor health outcomes in SCI patients who use substances is due to a core personality trait of impulsivity - either as an early trait that led to the drug use (or to the event that caused the SCI) or as a consequence of chronic drug use damaging the brain. At Veteran and civilian medical centers, we will use medical records to identify paraplegic outpatients age 18-50 with a trauma-induced SCI who have full use of hands with a minimum 6 months since injury. Patients will be interviewed by phone about substance use. Thirty will be selected for never having regular tobacco or illicit drug use, or binge alcohol use (controls), 30 will be selected for smoking > 10 cig/day with no histories of regular illicit drug use or problematic alcohol use, 30 will be selected for current smoking plus binge drinking with no histories of other regular substance use, and 30 will be selected for current smoking plus cannabis (CAN) use, but no history of regular use of other drugs. We will conduct a baseline behavioral assessment in the patient’s home, or in the clinic following an outpatient appointment. First, study group membership will be verified with saliva drug screen, breath carbon monoxide and alcohol readings. Using an iPad, a research assistant (RA) will administer mental tasks. The stop-signal and emotional-face go-no-go tasks are like a “Simon says” task of self-control. The delay-discounting and probability-discounting tasks measure how severely the patient de-values hypothetical rewards that are delayed in time or are uncertain, and the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) will measure risk-taking. The RA will then interview the patient about Spinal Cord Injury Quality of Life (SCI-QoL) using the PROMIS item bank (i

Document Details

Document Type
DoD Grant Award
Publication Date
Jul 16, 2019
Source ID
W81XWH1910032

Entities

People

  • James M Bjork

Organizations

  • United States Army
  • Virginia Commonwealth University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Medicine

Readers

  • Child and Adolescent Substance Abuse Science in Autism Spectrum Disorders.
  • Mental Health of Military Veterans with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD): Risk Factors, Prevalence, Symptoms, and Treatment.
  • Neurotrauma and Rehabilitation Medicine.