Congenital Heart Defect Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Mixed Methods RCT Evaluating a Telehealth-based Nurse-led Transition Intervention in Combination With Access to a CHD Website, vs. the CHD Website Alone, on Preparing Rural-based Adolescents Living With CHD to Successfully Transition From Pediatric to Adult Cardiology Care
Approximately 1 in 10 teenagers lives with a chronic health condition that will require ongoing care as they enter adulthood. Birth defects of the heart, also known as congenital heart disease (CHD) are more common than any other type of birth defect and affect about 1 in 100 children, with most surviving to adulthood. However, most teenagers with CHD have little knowledge about their heart and lack confidence in talking with doctors and nurses about their health. These are essential skills when entering the adult-oriented health care system after graduating from pediatric care. In the current study proposal our team plans to evaluate the effectiveness of delivering 1-on-1 teaching sessions for adolescents who live in smaller communities and can't easily come to Edmonton for appointments in the heart clinic. Fortunately in Alberta we have a widely available system called Telehealth that allows nurses and teens to meet by private, secure teleconferencing while hundreds of miles away. Telehealth is provided by health clinics around the province. We propose to use Telehealth in adolescents' home communities to provide these teaching sessions for 16-19 year olds with CHD who are soon going to be graduating from pediatric to adult care. Participants who receive a nurse-led teaching session will be compared with a similar number of adolescents who are not offered a teaching session, using a questionnaire that addresses skills related to taking care of their health condition. This questionnaire will be completed on-line (or if preferred by the participant, by letter mail) 1 month and 6 month after entering the study. Deciding which adolescents receive a nurse-led teaching session will be random, i.e. like the flip of a coin. Regardless, all participants will receive access to a website for young people with CHD called iHeartChange.
PURPOSE: The Transitioning Rural Adolescents to Adult Care (TRAAC) Study is a prospective cohort study evaluating the impact of a Telehealth-based nurse-led transition intervention in combination with access to a CHD website on preparing rural-based adolescents living with congenital heart disease (CHD) to successfully transition from pediatric to adult cardiology care. OBJECTIVES: The primary objective is to determine the impact of a nurse-led transition intervention in combination with access to the iHeartChange website on adolescents' knowledge of their heart [Hypothesis: the nurse-led intervention will result in superior CHD knowledge compared to baseline]. The secondary objectives are to: (i) evaluate the impact of the nurse-led intervention on adolescents' self-efficacy [Hypothesis: the nurse-led intervention will result in superior self-efficacy compared to baseline], (ii) evaluate the impact of the nurse-led intervention on adolescents' self-management skills [Hypothesis: the nurse-led intervention will result in superior self-management skills compared to baseline]. (iii) measure frequency of iHeartChange use by participants RESEARCH METHOD: Participants will be recruited through the Stollery Children's Hospital Outreach Pediatric Cardiology clinics. After discussion with the Research Coordinator, the participant will be emailed an online consent form, and baseline questionnaires through REDCap as well as an email from the iHeartChange website after the baseline questionnaires are complete. At the 1 month and 6 month post enrollment, participants will receive the link to complete the questionnaire via email. Should they not complete the questionnaire within the first 2 weeks, they will receive reminder emails at 2, 4 and 6 weeks post initial send out. At the completion of the 1 month and 6 month questionnaires, the participant will receive a small incentive. For all participants, a one-on-one telehealth session with the nurse will be set up. The session will take ~ 1 hour. Prior to the session the participant will receive a mail out transition package of additional written resources containing a "When You're 18 booklet" with transition specific information, disease specific information sheets, adolescent mental health resources, +/- endocarditis information if applicable. Participant heart history information will be collected as well as demographics by accessing their paper charts, eClinician, Netcare and Connectcare electronic medical records. Baseline data we are collecting includes current height, weight, date of birth, cardiac diagnosis, cardiac surgery and procedure information, medications, cardiology visits and other information from the cardiology clinic letters. DATA ANALYSIS: Each participant will be assigned an alphanumerical code and pseudonym. All qualitative data (nursing logs, text/email transcripts) will be transcribed, anonymized, and analyzed for codes, categories and subcategories. The unit of analysis will be the nurse-led session; all data for each session will be analyzed together to get a sense of what happened, what influenced what happened, and whether the intervention was successful. Categories will be given descriptors that use words as close to the data as possible; eventually, categories will be grouped into main categories. Thematic analysis will be used to define broader categories of potential influences on intervention effectiveness with the unit of analysis being the entire set of coded session data. The results of quantitative analyses will be compared with qualitative results to explore the extent to which there is agreement. Priority will be given to quantitative data; a nuanced understanding of what influenced intervention effectiveness will be sought through a process of integration. ;
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