Enhanced Medical Rehabilitation for Spinal Cord Injury (EMRSCI)
Spinal Cord Injuries
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Spinal Cord Injuries focused on measuring Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Spinal Cord Injury, Patient Engagement, Medical Rehabilitation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- (1) inpatient therapists specializing in SCI patients for at least six months
- (2) practicing on one of two SCI units at the SRAL
- (3) willing to collect study measures
- (4) willing to be videotaped for therapy sessions with patients
- (5) willing and able to participate in EMR training and supervision sessions.
Exclusion Criteria:
- (1) inpatient therapists specializing in SCI for less than six months
- (2) not willing/able to follow study protocol
Sites / Locations
- Shirley Ryan Ability Lab
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Standard of Care (SOC)
Enhanced Medical Rehabilitation (EMR)
The control group for this study will receive rehabilitation therapy that is recommended and provided by the current healthcare structure. The SOC group will receive therapy only from four therapists who are not trained and supervised in EMR. These therapists will be monitored (videotaped or observed) but will not be not asked to do anything differently with their patients. The investigators recognize that spillover of therapist EMR training to untrained therapists is a concern. Thus, the investigators will ask therapists in the EMR group to agree not to share any of the training with non-trained therapists over the course of the study, and the investigators will provide free EMR training to the non-trained therapists once the treatment phase of the study is complete.
Patients in the EMR group will also receive the recommended rehabilitation therapy, but they will receive therapy only from four therapists who are trained and supervised in EMR. The therapy sessions will follow EMR protocol. EMR is a set of behavioral skills that therapists can incorporate into their daily therapy sessions to increase patient engagement and achieve a high intensity of therapy, thereby improving functional and psychosocial outcomes of patients in medical rehabilitation.