Status:
UNKNOWN
The Effect of Mindfulness on Cognition and Emotion Following Acquired Brain Injury
Lead Sponsor:
University of East Anglia
Collaborating Sponsors:
Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS Trust
Conditions:
Injuries, Brain
Eligibility:
All Genders
18-65 years
Phase:
NA
Brief Summary
Can mindfulness help with attention and emotion difficulties after a brain injury? People who have a brain injury often have problems with their attention and emotions. This study will see if a short...
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion
- Aged 18 years and over
- Medical evidence of ABI with attention or executive functioning difficulties, such as difficulties with planning, inhibition or attention
- Time since ABI to be 9 months or greater • ABI severity to be moderate to severe, determined by the Mayo classification system (Malec et al., 2007). This is classification system is frequently used to determine ABI severity and is standard practice to record at the acute stage of care when the individual is admitted to hospital. This means there must be evidence of one or more of the following in medical notes: the individual's lowest Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) score is less than 13, there is a loss of consciousness of at least 30 minutes immediately following ABI and post traumatic amnesia (PTA) is at least 24 hours in length. If there is no evidence of this in the medical notes, then there must be evidence that the individual has clinically significant difficulties resulting from their ABI to have needed a referral to brain injury services.
- There are self-reported or clinician-identified emotional difficulties to adjusting to circumstances post-ABI
Exclusion
- Significant, severe and enduring presence of mental health difficulties or substance misuse that would prevent valid engagement in experimental tasks
- Perceptual, language, communication, reading or motor difficulties that would prevent valid engagement in experimental tasks
- The presence of developmental or acquired dyslexia affecting the automatic reading of words in the emotional Stroop
- Severe cognitive difficulties that would prevent valid engagement in experimental tasks
- Presence of pre-existing or comorbid disorders that may affect cognitive functioning (other than ABI) that would prevent valid engagement in experimental tasks
Key Trial Info
Start Date :
July 31 2017
Trial Type :
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation :
ESTIMATED
End Date :
January 1 2018
Estimated Enrollment :
46 Patients enrolled
Trial Details
Trial ID
NCT03231488
Start Date
July 31 2017
End Date
January 1 2018
Last Update
August 11 2017
Active Locations (12)
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1
Cambridge University Hospitals Nhs Foundation Trust
Cambridge, United Kingdom
2
Cambridgeshire Community Services Nhs Trust
Cambridge, United Kingdom
3
Headway Cambridgeshire
Cambridge, United Kingdom
4
Brain Injury Rehabilitation Trust
Ely, United Kingdom