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Deprivation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06460090 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Developmental Language Disorder and Language Impairment

Evaluating a Targeted Selective Speech, Language, and Communication Intervention at Scale - Protocol for the 'Happy Talk' Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial.

HappyTalk
Start date: June 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The overall aim of this clinical trial is to evaluate an at scale version of 'Happy Talk' in a large scale effectiveness study (examining inputs, outputs and outcomes) based on a sample of children from socially disadvantaged areas. Researchers will compare Happy Talk to usual care and children's allocation to the programme will be decided on randomly. The investigators also aim to - complete a pre-trial process evaluation to inform intervention implementation - examining factors which promote parental engagement and partnership between SLTs and educators and incorporating these into SLT training and future rollouts of the programme. - complete a concurrent process evaluation from a realist perspective to examine how the mechanisms underpinning Happy Talk are influenced by the implementation context and therefore what would need to be considered for successful implementation across varied settings. Our SWAT is embedded in this process evaluation and addresses the Trials Methodology Research Network methodological priority questions 1 and 5 https://priorityresearch.ie/priority-one-questions/ - Complete an economic evaluation in which compare the costs and benefits of Happy Talk are compared to standard pre/school care. The study aims to answer the following research questions: When implemented at scale 1. Does 'Happy Talk', a targeted selective intervention focused on increasing parent and early educator responsive interaction, improve language and quality of-life (QoL) outcomes in socially disadvantaged preschool and young school-aged children? 2. Does Happy Talk enhance responsiveness and language promoting behaviours in home and pre/school contexts? 3. What programme features support successful real-world application of 'Happy Talk' including factors which promote parental engagement; partnership between SLTs and educators; and fidelity of implementation? 4. How do contextual factors influence Happy Talk implementation /outcomes? 5. How can trials become part of routine care? 6. Is Happy Talk cost effective compared to usual care? Intervention: The programme is informed by general systems theory and is embedded in the preschools, and homes of socially disadvantaged children with the aim of effecting change in parent and educator behaviour. There are both parent and preschool staff components to the programme.

NCT ID: NCT02617251 Completed - Deprivation Clinical Trials

Impact of Deprivation on Hospital Care Efficiency in Paediatrics

PRECAPED
Start date: April 2015
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Many studies have shown that deprived patients consumed more healthcare resources than non-deprived patients, in particular in terms of increased length of stay (LOS) and readmission rates, which has an impact on hospital efficiency and the healthcare system as a whole. There are many types of indicators available to assess deprivation in a hospital setting and French decision makers are currently using reliance on public aids to allocate additional funding to hospitals, based on the percentage of deprived patients they admit. However there are limits to this method: it only assesses one dimension of deprivation, the target population often does not know about the existence of those aids, and they have a clear threshold effect. An alternative solution is to use ecological deprivation indices which are obtained by aggregating different variables measured at a specific time and place, i.e. the patient's place of residence at the time of care. One such index, the FDep , was developed specifically in France, although others such as the Carstairs index and the European deprivation index also exist. The primary objective of this study is to study the association between deprivation, measured by the FDep, and hospital care efficiency in paediatric and neonatology patients, measured by the difference between patient LOS and the national average LOS of their diagnosis-related group, DRG). The secondary objectives are to carry out a budget impact analysis on the impact of deprivation for hospitals with a paediatric or neonatology ward, to study the association between deprivation and readmission at 15 days, to study the relation between FDep and the currently used deprivation indicators, and to assess the added value of the FDep compared to those indicators and whether or not it should be used in routine practice. In order to do so, an exhaustive retrospective study using the French hospital claims database will be carried out for the years 2012-2014. Deprivation indices will be calculated based on patients' postcode. The primary endpoint will be calculated using the national LOS present in the French national cost study. Similarly, the budget impact will look at the difference between production costs derived from the national cost study after adjusting for LOS and the statutory health insurance's tariffs, which will allow us to assess whether a hospital stay is associated with a gain, a loss or is budget-neutral for the hospital. Readmissions at 15 days will be identified through record linkage. Descriptive analyses will summarise both hospital and patient characteristics. Uni- and bivariate analyses will be carried out by focusing of the variables of interest (e.g. average deprivation index by legal status of the hospital, mean LOS depending on the number of paediatric beds etc.). The deprivation index will be divided into quantiles as is the norm and the endpoints will be assessed for each of those quantiles. An ANOVA (or a Kruskal-Wallis test if the ANOVA hypotheses are not met) will test whether the results differ between each quantile. For readmission rates, a Chi² test will be performed. In order to study the association between deprivation and the endpoints, the investigators will model each endpoint using as the main explanatory variable the deprivation index. Three main types of explanatory variables will be added to the model: patient characteristics (age, sex, severity level etc.), hospital characteristics (legal status, size, number of full-time equivalent etc.) and environment/context characteristics (number of paediatricians for 1,000 inhabitants, rural vs. urban area etc.). In order to assess the added benefit of using the deprivation index vs. the current indicators, a sub-cohort will be constructed in Paris teaching hospitals (AP-HP) as unfortunately, whether the patient receives public aids is not present in the hospital claim database but is available only at the local level. The investigators will look at the distribution of patients with public aids in each quantile of the deprivation index and run the previous models using the two types of indicators one after the other and comparing the statistical performance of each pair of models.