Feasibility Study Clinical Trial
Official title:
Developing an Arts-based Intervention for Patients With End-stage Kidney Disease Whilst Receiving Haemodialysis
This research study aims to develop an arts-based intervention for patients with end-stage
kidney disease (ESKD) that can be implemented during haemodialysis sessions, and to assess
the feasibility of a randomised controlled trial (RCT). Haemodialysis is the most common
treatment for patients with ESKD; it involves attending hospital three times a week for a
period of four hours each time, during that time the patient is connected to a dialysing unit
that drains and filters their blood, performing the role of the damaged kidneys. Patients
with ESKD receiving haemodialysis report low quality of life (QoL) and poor mental health.
Arts-based interventions have been used in a variety of different settings to improve both
QoL and mental health, but there's a lack of research assessing their effectiveness in
patients with ESKD receiving haemodialysis.
This study will develop an arts-based intervention by reviewing the existing literature and
forming an advisory group consisting of patients, healthcare staff, artists and academics.
Once developed a feasibility RCT will be conducted on a haemodialysis unit. The feasibility
RCT will involve establishing the recruitment, participation and retention rates of patients
who are eligible for inclusion. A process evaluation will be conducted alongside the
feasibility trial; this will involve interviews with patients and focus groups with staff to
explore experiences of the intervention. Finally a feasibility economic evaluation will be
conducted to explore methods for a cost-effectiveness analysis within an RCT. The hope is
this study will contribute to a future RCT that will evaluate the impact of arts-based
interventions on the QoL and mental health of patients receiving haemodialysis.
This study consists of four phases and will utilise a mixed methods design. The first phase
is the development of the intervention, the second phase is a feasibility randomised
controlled trial (RCT), the third phase is a qualitative process evaluation and the fourth
phase is a feasibility economic evaluation.
The first phase will involve the development of the intervention and will follow the
development framework published by Fancourt in 'Arts in Health' (2017). This framework was
developed specifically to inform arts-based interventions for healthcare contexts, and
focuses primarily on identifying the needs of patients and staff within the clinical setting.
The development will be informed by a systematic literature review and an interdisciplinary
advisory group. The advisory group will consist of three patient representatives, two staff
representatives from the haemodialysis unit, a renal counsellor from the Northern Health and
Social Care Trust, two artist representatives from Arts Care Northern Ireland, the Chief
Executive Officer from Arts Care Northern Ireland, the Community Wellbeing Manager in the
Northern Health and Social Care Trust, a representative from the Renal Arts Group at Queen's,
a representative from the University of Florida Arts in Medicine faculty, and a statistician.
They will meet approximately every three months to inform the intervention and the research
process.
The second phase will be a feasibility RCT that will involve recruiting 30 participants from
Antrim Area Hospital's haemodialysis unit. Feasibility RCT's are necessary to determine
whether a definitive randomised controlled trial can and should be conducted, and to identify
the key areas within the methodology that work well or need to be adapted.
Recruitment will take place over seven months.Half the participants will be randomly
allocated to the experimental group who will receive the intervention and half will be
randomly allocated to the control group who will receive usual care.Participants will not be
randomly allocated on an individual level, but instead will be randomly allocated according
to the days of the week that they attend for haemodialysis. Patients receiving haemodialysis
attend hospital on a set shift pattern, either Monday, Wednesday and Friday, or Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday. As the unit is open planned there is a risk that participants
allocated to the control group will observe the intervention taking place if random
allocation is done on an individual basis and this may influence the outcome; therefore
randomisation will occur according to shift pattern to reduce the risk of contamination. The
intervention will consist of an artistic activity that is minimally disruptive to the
clinical setting, such as painting, sketching, pen and ink or creative writing. The
intervention will be done at the bedside and will be adapted to ensure that vascular access
is maintained. In order to ensure infection control protocols are followed each participant
will receive their own set of art supplies to prevent the potential spread of infection
through contaminated shared materials. The intervention will involve 6 sessions that will be
administered over the course of 3 weeks for approximately an hour during dialysis sessions.
The third phase is the qualitative process evaluation. Participants will consist of both
patients on the unit and staff who are working within the unit. Patients recruited will
include those who have participated in phase two of the study, both in the intervention and
control group. Semi-structured interviews will be conducted with 13 patients in order to
capture a broad range of experiences with the intervention and the research process,
including potential methods to make the intervention more accessible or engaging, experiences
of being randomisation and participating in a control group, and reasons for retention of
participants. 3 focus groups will be conducted with healthcare staff who have experienced the
intervention on the unit. Due to the potential impact that arts-based interventions could
have on the responsibilities of staff and the environment that they work in it is important
to consider their experiences within the process evaluation as well, including identifying
any barriers or facilitators to implementing the intervention in the dialysis setting.
Phase four is the feasibility economic evaluation. Participants who have been recruited into
phase two of the study will be asked to complete a Patient Service Use Log throughout the
study, this will be completed with the PhD student during the haemodialysis session, and the
approximate cost of the intervention will be also be calculated.
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