A community health worker-delivered intervention (STEPS) to support chronic pain self-management among older adults in an underserved urban community: protocol for a randomized trial

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-2-2025

Publication Title

Trials

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Older adults in disadvantaged urban communities contend with chronic psychosocial and environmental stressors that contribute to high levels of chronic pain-related disability. African American older adults are especially at risk due to the health-damaging effects of structural racism. The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of a chronic pain self-management intervention tailored for this context. STEPS (Seniors using Technology to Engage in Pain Self-management) is a community health worker (CHW)-led chronic pain self-management program designed for older adults living in underserved communities. It is a 7-week intervention that includes (a) brief videos presenting pain self-management skills; (b) weekly telephone calls with a CHW to support the practice of new skills and goal setting; and (c) tracking daily step counts using a wearable activity tracker. CHWs also screen for social needs and make appropriate community referrals.

METHODS: We will randomly assign 414 participants to the STEPS intervention or a control condition in a 1:1 ratio, stratifying by gender and age group. We hypothesize that participants in the STEPS intervention will have greater improvements in pain interference and pain intensity, and a more positive Global Impression of Change immediately following the intervention and at 12 months from baseline. Control group members are invited to attend a workshop covering key intervention content after the final data collection point.

DISCUSSION: Growing evidence supports the effectiveness of CHWs as culturally sensitive liaisons between healthcare systems and underserved communities. If the STEPS program is shown to significantly improve pain-related outcomes, STEPS could be integrated into healthcare systems to more comprehensively treat chronic pain while reducing barriers to care and promoting non-pharmacological pain management strategies.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT05278234. Registered on March 3, 2022.

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Chronic Pain; Community Health Workers; Self-Management; Aged; Black or African American; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic; Male; Female; Vulnerable Populations; Treatment Outcome; Medically Underserved Area; Urban Population; Pain Management; Age Factors

PubMed ID

40457457

Volume

26

Issue

1

First Page

186

Last Page

186

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