Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is investigating the acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of a brief, remote treatment for youth injection phobia. It will also be examining the acceptability, feasibility, and initial psychometric properties of three cognitive bias measures adapted or newly developed for youth injection fear.


Clinical Trial Description

This study aims to investigate the acceptability, feasibility, and efficacy of a brief, remote treatment for youth injection phobia. There is a pressing need to increase the accessibility, reach, and efficacy of treatments for youth injection fear, as this fear affects approximately 11% of youth and can prevent them from receiving necessary medical procedures or vaccinations. Developing and validating the efficacy of treatments for youth injection fear that are time-efficient, convenient, and broadly accessible will facilitate more widespread targeting of this fear in youth, which could have a meaningful impact on youths' ability to receive medical treatments that involve injections or blood draws. Thus far, separate evidence bases have formed to support the efficacy of brief, intensive treatments for youth specific phobias and other anxiety disorders AND the efficacy of remotely delivered treatments for a range of youth anxiety disorders. However, studies have not yet combined these approaches to investigate their efficacy for treating youth injection phobia. The current study thus serves as the first to specifically examine the clinical utility of using a combined intensive and remote approach to treat youth injection phobia. Investigation into the treatment's impact on youth injection fear will be complemented by information, provided by youths' parents, about the treatment's convenience, acceptability, speed, suitability for the child's specific presentation, and overall helpfulness. Lastly, as a first step towards better understanding the cognitive processing variables that influence the development and maintenance of youth injection fear, the current study will examine the initial acceptability, feasibility, and psychometric properties of adapted or newly developed measures of attentional, interpretation, and memory bias. This study will use a multiple baseline design in which up to 18 youth will be randomly assigned to a one-, two-, or three-week baseline period before beginning the brief, remote intervention. Treatment will consist of two sessions in which the first session provides education about anxiety and lasts approximately 1.5 hours, and the second session consists of gradual exposure to injection-related stimuli and lasts approximately three to four hours. Throughout the study period, youth will complete various measures related to injection fear and related constructs as well as the cognitive bias tasks at three separate time-points. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04972006
Study type Interventional
Source Boston University Charles River Campus
Contact Alicia R Fenley, MA
Phone 8502943327
Email afenley@bu.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date July 2021
Completion date June 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04039243 - Addressing Anxiety in 2-3-Year-Olds: A Pilot Intervention Study N/A
Recruiting NCT05967468 - Evaluation of Family-Based Behavioral Treatments for Youth With Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03585010 - Brain Response Associated With Parent-based Treatment for Childhood Anxiety Disorders N/A
Terminated NCT03764644 - Web-based Attention Bias Modification Treatment for Childhood Anxiety Disorders N/A
Completed NCT03960944 - An Experimental Study of Psychological Effect of School Based-Yoga on Low-Income School Children N/A
Completed NCT04804917 - 3-year Follow-up of the Mind My Mind RCT
Completed NCT05605938 - Efficacy and Safety of Tenoten in the Treatment of Children With Anxiety Disorders Phase 4
Completed NCT03032926 - A Pilot Study of Fear Extinction Learning in Anxious Youth
Recruiting NCT04693858 - Efficacy Trial of the CALM Intervention N/A