Stress, Psychological Clinical Trial
Official title:
RCT Intervention to Reduce Stress in 0-5 Year Olds With Burns
The objectives of this study are to test and validate a simple, feasible intervention to
reduce pediatric burn traumatic stress in 0-5 year old children and their parents.
We have refined and implemented an early post-burn psychosocial assessment and intervention
for stress reduction for young children and their parents based on the "DEF" Protocol
(Distress, Emotional Support, Family) from NCTSN's 'Pediatric Medical Toolkit for Health
Care Providers,' and a burn specific version of the COPE (Creating Opportunities for Parent
Empowerment)intervention.
It is hypothesized that the combined DEF + COPE Intervention will be simple to implement and
use under both experimental and real world conditions. The proof of the latter hypothesis
will be that staff at Shriners Hospitals for Children-Boston will willingly incorporate it
into routine care by the end of the project.
We will evaluate, using an RCT design, the DEF + COPE Intervention by comparing outcomes for
subjects who are randomly assigned to receive it with outcomes for subjects who are assigned
to receive the DEF Intervention only.
It is hypothesized that children in the DEF + COPE Intervention Group will show
significantly greater decreases over time in pain and anxiety ratings, heart rate, PTSD
total symptom scores and physiological symptom scores (such as heart rate and heart rate
variability from baseline to follow up) than will children in the DEF-only group. Similarly,
it is hypothesized that parents assigned to the DEF + COPE group will show significantly
decreased scores on the Stanford PTSD measure.
Despite their clear vulnerability and demonstrated need, preschool children and their
families have been the subject of very little research on traumatic stress following all
types of injuries including burns (Stoddard & Saxe, 2001). This lack of research is even
more critical in an age in which tragic and traumatic events are increasing in frequency and
severity.
Early identification of young burn survivors who also have elevated heart rates, high levels
of pain and/or exhibit other symptoms of PTSD may help to prevent the development of later
psychopathology. If assessment of stress is improved, then early interventions may be
designed to prevent or reduce the later emergence of PTSD including phobias and associated
symptoms. As of this time, however, no early interventions are available for very young
burned children.
The intervention is driven by the findings of our previous study of 1-4 year olds that
suggested that the child's PTSD symptoms could be reduced by improved pain and anxiety
control and by reduced parental PTSD. The current study aims to advance the science of
prevention of pathological stress responses in preschool children and their parents,
strengthen both child and parent resilience after burn trauma and its treatments, and
provide interventions for the children with posttraumatic symptoms such as re-experiencing,
hyperarousal, avoidance, insomnia, nightmares, or regressions in social abilities like
smiling and/or vocalization.
Our goal is not only to set up an intervention that will be effective in reducing stress for
young children with burns and their families, we also want to assure that the intervention
is feasible and sustainable for implementation in Shriners Hospital Boston, other Shriners
Hospitals, and other Level I Pediatric Burn Centers after the end of this project.
The models for intervention are:
- COPE (Creating Opportunities for Parent Empowerment)
The psychosocial intervention which holds the greatest promise as a treatment for young
burned children and their families is the COPE (Creating Opportunities for Parent
Empowerment) program. COPE was designed to be implemented in a tertiary care center with
seriously ill children. It has been shown in more than a dozen studies to significantly
reduce symptoms of stress in both children and their parents. In one study, Melnyk et al
(2004) delivered the COPE program with audiotapes and matching written information, and a
parent-child workbook that helped implement the audiotaped information. It focused on
increasing: 1) parents' knowledge and understanding the range of behaviors and emotions that
young children typically display during and after hospitalization and 2) direct parent
participation in their children's' emotional and physical care. In collaboration with COPE's
senior author, B. M. Melnyk, the COPE intervention and materials will be tailored for a
population of young burned children at Shriners Hospitals for Children-Boston.
Melnyk and her colleagues (2004; 1997; 2006) developed COPE as a "theory-based
educational-behavioral program that consists of two types of educational information: (a)
child behavioral information that teaches parents about the most typical emotions and
behavioral responses that young children manifest as they cope with illness or trauma and
hospitalization, and (b) parental role information that provides parents with suggestions
regarding how they can best help their children to cope with the hospital experience"
(Melnyk, Feinstein, Alpert-Gillis et al., 2006, p. 475). The COPE program was developed to
target two major stressors that parents experience when their children are hospitalized: 1)
their children's emotions, behaviors, and physical characteristics and 2) the loss of the
parental role/control. COPE also contains a behavioral component to help parents to carry
out the recommendations provided to them in the educational information.
There are now three versions of the COPE program: (a) COPE for parents of young hospitalized
children, 1 to 7 years of age, (b) COPE: PICU for parents of 2 to 7-year- old critically ill
young children, and (c) COPE: NICU for parents of low-birth-weight (LBW) premature infants.
Each of these versions of the COPE program is essentially self-administered to parents via
audio tapes and activity workbooks, generally in three brief (15 minute) sessions over a two
day period during a pediatric hospitalization. Examples of workbook activities are teaching
their children about how to express their feelings through play with their children and
reading the Jenny's Wish book (i.e., a story about a small child who copes successfully with
a critical care hospitalization). The suggested administration times are: 6-16 hours after
admission to PICU, 2-16 hours after transfer to general pediatric unit, and 2-3 days after
discharge from hospital.
Multiple studies have shown the validity of COPE (Melnyk, 1994, 1995; Melnyk et al., 2004;
Melnyk et al., 2001; Melnyk et al., 1997; Melnyk, Feinstein, & Fairbanks, 2006; Melnyk &
Feinstein, 2001; Melnyk, Feinstein, Alpert-Gillis et al., 2006; Vulcan & Nikulich-Barrett,
1988). The 2004 paper describes an RCT design with 174 mother-child dyads that showed
significant reductions in parental and child symptoms of stress at six and twelve months
after the intervention.
- The Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress Toolkit for Health Care Providers
The Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress Toolkit for Health Care Providers provides another
way to reduce unnecessary stress in medically ill children. Created by the National Child
Traumatic Stress Network ("National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) Toolkit for
Health Care Providers,"; Stuber, Schneider, Kassam-Adams, Kazak, & Saxe, 2006), the Toolkit
is another innovation that could provide a platform not only for identifying children and
families who are most in need of the COPE intervention but also for interventions not
addressed by COPE like finding additional parental support, providing additional pain,
anxiety, or depression medication for children or parents, or designing more targeted
interventions for children and families whose stress levels may be lower overall but high
only in certain areas.
The Toolkit contains a protocol called 'D-E-F' that helps clinicians to assess medically
traumatized children and their families and to plan specific interventions for them. The
idea of the Toolkit is that after the standard ABC's (Airways, Breathing, Circulation) of
medical problems have been dealt with, clinicians should attend to the next most important
issues, the 'DEF's of problems. The DEF acronym stands for Distress, Emotional Support, and
Family Functioning. As described later in this proposal, the DEF protocol will be the basis
for the initial assessment and clinical intervention recommendations provided by child
psychiatry staff as part of a new program being developed at SBH Boston. The Toolkit
contains handouts to help parents understand the stresses their medically ill children are
facing and to help their children to cope with them as well as an overarching framework for
mental health and medical clinicians to use in assessing and intervening to minimize post
traumatic stress reactions.
The Toolkit materials are designed primarily for hospital-based heath care providers like
physicians and nurses, and for parents. The Toolkit promotes "trauma-informed practice of
pediatric health care in hospital settings across the continuum of careā¦ - e.g., from
emergency care, to the ICU, to specialized inpatient units, to general pediatrics". The
NCTSN Toolkit for Health Care Providers provides an overarching framework for healthcare
workers to use for both assessment and intervention for PTSD in children and parents.
Working within the NCTSN, many medical and psychosocial professionals, including Drs. Saxe
and Stoddard, spent several years formulating this approach to working with children who
have injuries and medically related traumas (Stuber et al., 2006). The Toolkit was released
in late 2004 and although it shows a great deal of promise, it has yet to be validated and
applied as a part of routine clinical care. The proposed project will be the first to
empirically test it as a part of an intervention strategy.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
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