Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Withdrawn
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05378958 |
Other study ID # |
APHP220260 |
Secondary ID |
2022-A00093-40 |
Status |
Withdrawn |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 2023 |
Est. completion date |
August 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2024 |
Source |
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Therapeutic patient education (TPE) is one of the mechanisms that make patients with chronic
disease as competent as possible to manage illness and treatment by helping them to be
autonomous and responsible for their decision-making.
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the organization of care, prioritizing the emergency fight
against the epidemic.
The French High Authority of Health (HAS) has recommended maintaining individual TPE sessions
by videoconference or telephone, based on the usual stages of the educational process.
Several working groups have looked into remote TPE and recommendations have been issued in
the form of practical advice but without questioning the participants, who did not
participate in the reflection. No consensus, including health authorities, has been reached
on this subject.
At Necker Hospital, ETPs were carried out remotely, by videoconference. Understanding remote
therapeutic education by videoconference through lived experience, by means of a one-hour
interview, of the caregivers who deliver it and the parents of patients or the patients who
receive it, will make it possible to better understand the effects of remote mode on
therapeutic education sessions but also on professional practices and on participants.
The benefit will be twofold: for caregivers: to facilitate the deployment of this new
educational offer. For patients and their carers: give priority access to TPE to families who
are far from the healthcare system or to patients who are too fragile to travel and thus
reduce inequalities and geographical barriers.
Description:
Chronic disease onset, due to its lasting and progressive nature, generates significant
personal, family and socio-professional disabilities and difficulties. This situation
requires active participation on the part of the patient, who must adopt protective behaviors
in order to live better as much as possible.
Therapeutic patient education (TPE) is one of the mechanisms that will make patients as
competent as possible to manage illness and treatment by helping them to be autonomous and
responsible for their decision-making.
The COVID-19 pandemic has changed the organization of care, prioritizing the emergency fight
against the epidemic. The TPE programs were also impacted by the pandemic.The French High
Authority of Health (HAS) has recommended maintaining individual TPE sessions by
videoconference or telephone, based on the usual stages of the educational process, without
however defining clear recommendations for remote TPE. Several working groups have looked
into remote TPE and recommendations have been issued in the form of practical advice without
questioning the participants, who did not participate in the reflection. No consensus,
including health authorities, has been reached on this subject.
At Necker Hospital, ETPs were carried out remotely, by videoconference. This new way of
providing training required upstream preparation, reflection on the content, the use of
digital tools and their mastery on the part of participants and speakers. The purpose of this
qualitative study is to understand remote therapeutic education by videoconference through
lived experience, by means of a one-hour interview, of the caregivers who deliver it and the
parents of patients or the patients who receive it. The interviews will make it possible to
better understand the effects of distant mode on therapeutic education sessions on
participants but also on professional's practices. The benefit will be twofold: for
caregivers: to facilitate the deployment of this new educational offer. For patients and
their carers: give priority access to TPE to families who are far from the healthcare system
or to patients who are too fragile to travel and thus reduce inequalities and geographical
barriers.