Reports From the Field

Evaluation of the Empower Veterans Program for Military Veterans With Chronic Pain


 

References

Results

Data were abstracted for 115 veterans who started the EVP. Of these, 48 left the program, leaving 67 veterans (58%) who completed the program. Completers and noncompleters were similar in age, gender, and baseline measures (Table 1). Fifty-three (79%) completers and 35 (73%) noncompleters were male. A chi-square test of independence showed no significant association between gender and program completion (χ21 [N = 115] = .595, P = .440).

tables and figures for JCOM

Comparison of pre-and postintervention mean scale scores resulted in statistically significant differences for all comparisons (Table 2). These comparisons yielded improvements in the desired direction. For example, the scores on the NPRS, the MPI, and the PCS (along with its subscales) decreased, revealing reductions in pain severity, the impact of pain on the veterans’ lives, and pain catastrophizing. The 2 individual item scores on the WHOQOL-BREF increased, indicating improvements in perceived quality of life and satisfaction with health. The domain scores on the WHOQOL-BREF increased, revealing improvements in pain-related quality of life. The moderate to large effect sizes indicated clinically significant improvements for veterans with chronic high-impact pain who completed the EVP.

tables and figures for JCOM

Analysis of data obtained using the PTSS yielded high mean scores for items that focused on patient satisfaction with treatment (Table 3). Scaled statistics yielded a mean (SD) of 46.95 (4.40). These results denoted overall patient satisfaction with the EVP.

tables and figures for JCOM

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