Supplementary file 1_A pilot, single-arm feasibility study of a multidimensional behaviora
by Tamanna Islam·Updated 16d ago
179.5 KB1files
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Description
An 8-week pilot study assessed the feasibility of a group-based, video conference-delivered behavioral intervention for cognitive fatigability in people with multiple sclerosis. The dataset, published by Tamanna Islam in 2026, includes results from 18 enrolled participants, tracking metrics like eligibility, recruitment, adherence, and satisfaction. Feasibility was evaluated using a traffic-light framework to determine if progression to a full-scale randomized controlled trial is advised.
Use Cases
Assessing recruitment and retention rates for telehealth-based clinical trials based on the reported eligibility and completion metrics.
Evaluating participant satisfaction and perceived helpfulness of a structured behavioral program based on survey scores.
Designing feasibility frameworks for pilot studies based on the traffic-light (GREEN/AMBER/RED) assessment methodology described.
Analyzing treatment fidelity and facilitator adherence in manualized interventions based on session coverage metrics.
Strengths
High participant satisfaction, with 92% of respondents rating satisfaction >5 on a 10-point scale.
Strong recruitment uptake, with 86% of eligible participants enrolled from a clinic sample.
High treatment completion rate of 89% among the 18 enrolled participants.
Limitations
Description metadata is limited; actual data quality requires manual inspection after download.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
The dataset is very small at 179.5 KB, indicating limited scope and likely summary-level results rather than raw participant data.
Provenance
Source
figshare, authored by Tamanna Islam.
Collection Method
Data likely originates from a single-arm feasibility study conducted at an MS clinic, incorporating a needs assessment survey and focus group discussions.
Time Range
The study period is not specified, but results were published in 2026.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-05-21 04:36:22; freshness should be verified.
Data is provided as a PDF (179.5 KB), which may require extraction or manual digitization for quantitative analysis.