Monday, December 26, 2022

Dee publishes randomized control trial of physical therapy strategies for chronic pain after trauma


Congratulations to Justine Dee, MS, Clinical Associate Professor of Rehabilitation and Movement Science on the publication of a major article from her doctoral research!

Justine McCuen Dee & Benjamin Littenberg (2022) Regional vs global physical therapy interventions to treat chronic pain in survivors of trauma: a randomized controlled trial, Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy, DOI: 10.1080/10669817.2022.2159615

Background

A history of traumatic life events is associated with chronic pain in later life. Physical therapists utilize a variety of methods to treat pain, however, they have struggled to find effective interventions to improve patient outcomes.

Objective

To compare impairment-based, regional (REGION-PT) physical therapy (PT) to a global (GLOBAL-PT) model consisting of pain neuroscience education, graded motor imagery, and exercise for adults with chronic pain and history of trauma.

Design

Randomized Controlled Trial.

Methods

Adults ≥ 18 years of age with chronic pain and a history of ≥1 trauma identified through the Life Events Checklist received the allocated intervention once a week for six weeks. Treatment effects were assessed using linear mixed models.

Results

Ninety-eight participants completed the trial. There were no difference in outcomes between groups. There were significant interactions between race and intervention. Both interventions were associated with improvements in pain interference for white participants, but non-white participants experienced improvement only with GLOBAL-PT. Regardless of allocation, participants improved in physical function, six of the PROMIS-29 domains, and in pain interference measures.

Conclusion

Both interventions are reasonable strategies for individuals with chronic pain and a history of trauma.

 

Friday, December 9, 2022

FW: Free Crash Course in NIH Funding: 2023 NIH Grants Conference on Feb. 1-2

A great opportunity:

 

Free Crash Course in NIH Funding: 2023 NIH Grants Conference on Feb. 1-2.

New to NIH grants and looking to better understand the processes and policies behind NIH funding or are you Experienced and want to brush up on the latest policies and information?

Consider this your personal invitation from the NIH to attend this virtual event on February 1-2, 2023, where NIH and HHS experts will share policies, resources, guidance, and case studies in informative and engaging sessions.

The jam-packed agenda offers 2 days of sessions designed to clarify the NIH grants process and policies, and opportunities to engage with presenters through Q&A and chat features.

Registration is free and includes your personal “All Access Pass” to the virtual NIH Grants Conference 2022-2023 season.

 

Once registered and logged into the conference site, you are free to explore the 2-day agenda, on-demand library of related resources, and create your personal schedule.

 

Enjoy and see you there.

 

Thank you,

 

Brian

 

Brian Prindle, MBA, CRA | Executive Director | Signing Official

University of Vermont

Research Administration and Integrity

Office of the Vice President for Research

213 Waterman | 85 South Prospect Street

Burlington, VT 05405-0160

 

 

Thursday, December 8, 2022

FW: Call for proposals: Sustainable Campus Fund Innovation Research Project

Please note that the Graduate College is now accepting Sustainable Campus Fund Innovation Research Project proposals.

 

Please share widely with your graduate students.

 

àThe deadline is Tuesday, February 20, 2023.

 

Instructions for may be found here on the Graduate College website.

 

Thank you,