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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02820103
Other study ID # CZH/4/1025
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received June 21, 2016
Last updated August 14, 2017
Start date February 20, 2017
Est. completion date October 2017

Study information

Verified date August 2017
Source Edinburgh Napier University
Contact Barbara Farquharson, PhD
Phone 0131 455 3475
Email b.farquharson@napier.ac.uk
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

1. To test the effectiveness of the theory-based interventions (text+visual and text-only BCT-based interventions) against usual care in changing patients' intentions to phone ambulance immediately with symptoms of ACS ≥ 15 minutes duration.

2. To determine the most effective mode of delivery by comparing the text+visual BCT-based intervention with text-only BCT-based intervention.

3. To investigate any unintended consequences of the intervention on intentions to phone an ambulance for non-life-threatening symptoms.


Description:

Patient delay means many people do not achieve optimal benefit of time-dependent treatments for Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS). Reducing delay would reduce mortality and morbidity but to date, interventions to change behaviour have had mixed results. Systematic inclusion of behaviour-change techniques (BCTs) or a visual mode of delivery might improve the efficacy of interventions.

Aim To evaluate the efficacy of a BCT-based intervention and to compare two possible modes of delivery (text+visual and text-only).

Design A 3-arm web-based, parallel randomised, controlled trial of a theory-based intervention.

Methods and analysis The intervention comprises 12 BCTs systematically identified following systematic review and a consensus exercise undertaken with behaviour change experts. We aim to recruit n=177 participants who have experienced ACS in the previous 6 months from a local National Health Service (NHS) Teaching Hospital. Participants will be identified by Cardiac Rehabilitation staff and invited by letter to take part in the study. Those who wish to take part will be asked to access the experiment at a secure web-address and consent re-checked. Consenting participants will be randomly allocated in equal numbers to one of three study groups: i) usual care ii) usual care plus text-only BCT-based intervention or iii) usual care plus text+visual BCT-based intervention. The outcome variable will be the change in intention to phone an ambulance immediately with symptoms of ACS ≥15 minutes duration assessed using two randomised series of 8 scenarios representing varied symptoms before and after delivery of the interventions or control condition (usual care).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 177
Est. completion date October 2017
Est. primary completion date October 2017
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Adults, aged > 18 years

- Experience of Acute Coronary Syndrome within the previous six months

Exclusion Criteria:

- Anyone still hospitalised

- People who have experienced ACS within the previous two weeks.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Text+Visual BCT-based intervention
Participants in the visual intervention group will receive usual care specified below plus a specifically developed Text + Visual BCT-based intervention, comprising 12 BCTs identified from SR and expert consensus study. An animated video, just under 8 minutes in length is hosted online in the Intervention Modelling Experiment. The animation contains 9 of the 12 BCTs and tells the 'delay stories' of three different characters. It was not possible to deliver all of the 12 BCTs comprehensively in the relatively passive media of the animation as some techniques require active participation from participants (e.g. action planning). Thus, n=7 BCTs (1 2 Problem-solving; 1 4 Action planning; 5 2 Salience of consequences; 7 1 Prompts/cues; 9 3 Comparative imagining of future outcomes; 15 2 Mental rehearsal of successful performance) are also delivered via short web-based exercises which follow the animation.
Text-only BCT intervention
Participants in the text-only BCT-based intervention group will receive the usual care specified above plus a text-only BCT-based intervention. This was developed in the same way as the text + visual BCT-based intervention but does not include the visual elements (i.e. animation). Instead, the voiceover from the animated film is displayed in text on screen and narrated in audio. The BCTs which require active engagement are delivered via identical web-based exercises as the text + visual BCT-based intervention.
Leaflet information (control)
Participants in the control group will receive information that is currently used routinely in the NHS site to inform patients with ACS what to do if they experience symptoms after discharge.

Locations

Country Name City State
United Kingdom NHS Tayside Dundee Tayside

Sponsors (5)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Edinburgh Napier University The University of New South Wales, University of Aberdeen, University of Dundee, University of Stirling

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United Kingdom, 

References & Publications (1)

Farquharson B, Dombrowski S, Pollock A, Johnston M, Treweek S, Williams B, Smith K, Dougall N, Jones C, Pringle S. Reducing patient delay with symptoms of acute coronary syndrome: a research protocol for a systematic review of previous interventions to investigate which behaviour change techniques are associated with effective interventions. Open Heart. 2014 Aug 12;1(1):e000079. doi: 10.1136/openhrt-2014-000079. eCollection 2014. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Intentions to phone an ambulance immediately in response to scenarios representing possible symptoms of ACS using a 7-point Likert scale. Intention: Informed by the Theory of Planned Behaviour (Ajzen 1991), participants' intentions to phone an ambulance immediately will be assessed in response to each scenario using a single Likert-type item ('For these symptoms, after this amount of time, I would phone an ambulance immediately') scored 1=strongly disagree to 7=strongly agree. Immediately post intervention
Secondary Illness and symptom perceptions measured using the brief Illness Perception Questionnaire Participants' illness representations in relation to symptoms presented in each scenario will be assessed using the Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire (B-IPQ) (Broadbent et al. 2006). The questionnaire consists of 9 items assessing the five components that make up a person's perception of their illness - identity (beliefs about the illness label and symptoms), cause (beliefs about factors responsible for causing illness), timeline (beliefs and expectations about the course of illness), consequences (beliefs and expectations about the impact of illness) and cure-control (beliefs about the efficacy of treatment or coping behaviours). The questionnaire has good test-retest reliability, has been validated among people with Myocardial Infarction (MI) and has been shown able to distinguish between different illnesses (Broadbent et al. 2006). Immediately post intervention
Secondary Cognitive determinants of intention assessed using questionnaire based upon the theory of planned behaviour. : Informed by the Theory of Planned Behaviour (Ajzen 1991), the questionnaire will include - three items assessing attitude toward phoning an ambulance immediately using semantic differential scales (e.g. Useless-Useful) scored 1 to 7; three subjective norm items (e.g. people who are important to me think I should phone ambulance immediately in this situation) scored 1=Strongly disagree to 7=Strongly agree; and three perceived behavioural control items (e.g. Phoning an ambulance immediately in this situation is beyond my control) scored 1=Strongly disagree to 7=Strongly agree. Immediately post intervention
Secondary Self-efficacy assessed using questionnaire based upon Social Cognitive theory Informed by the Social Cognitive Model (Bandura 1998), people's generic self-efficacy to call an ambulance immediately will be assessed once before and once after the intervention. Participants will be asked to rate how certain they are that they could phone an ambulance immediately in nine different situations which vary in how difficult it would be to phone an ambulance (e.g. if you were out with friends). Responses will be elicited on a scale ranging from 0=not at all certain to 100=highly certain. Immediately post intervention
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