Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

After the initial hospitalization, parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer assume responsibility for assessing and managing their care; however, parents are often overwhelmed with information received throughout the hospitalization and are apprehensive about caring for their child at home. Parents want concise, focused information on how to care for their child after the hospital discharge. Two parent education discharge support strategies (PEDSS) were created to use at hospital discharge. PEDSS consists of a symptom management intervention and a support for the caregiver intervention. A cluster randomized control trial will assess the effectiveness and feasibility of the two different interventions.


Clinical Trial Description

Providing education to parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer is a primary component of nursing practice, but best practices regarding delivery of information are not known. Parents often report confusion and worry with the complexity and large volume of information received during the initial hospitalization that leads to concerns in caring for their child after discharge. In addition, the amount and content of education is not standardized across institutions. This results in considerable variability in educational practices, including symptom education. During a recent qualitative study, parents described helpful discharge education strategies as having written materials, keeping information concise, and receiving anticipatory guidance so they knew what to expect. These preferences were succinctly summarized by a mother of a child newly diagnosed with leukemia who stated "…it would be nice to have one sheet of paper that just said 'these are the signs that you're looking for at home'." The purpose of this research study is to implement and evaluate parent educational discharge support strategies (PEDSS) for parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer. Findings from this study will provide a framework for nurses to deliver concise and consistent information to parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer, and will assist parents with their child after hospital discharge.

The goal of this study is to determine the effectiveness and feasibility of two parent education discharge support strategies (PEDSS - symptom management vs. PEDSS - support for the caregiver) for parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer. Specific aims of the study include:

Specific Aim 1: Explore the effects of parent education discharge support strategies on childhood cancer symptoms (fever, pain, fatigue, nausea, appetite changes, and sleep problems) and parents' perception of their ability to care for their child with a new cancer diagnosis during the first two months following the initial hospital discharge.

Specific Aim 2: Determine whether implementation of parent education discharge support strategies decreases unplanned utilization of healthcare services (unscheduled clinic visits, emergency room visits, unplanned hospitalizations), and preventable toxicity (malnutrition, sepsis) among children with cancer during the first two months following the initial hospitalization.

Specific Aim 3: Examine the feasibility and fidelity of implementing the PEDSS at the initial hospital discharge among parents of newly diagnosed children with cancer for use through the first two months following hospital discharge at participating Magnet institutions. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03227068
Study type Interventional
Source Duke University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date December 29, 2017
Completion date June 29, 2020

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT04893265 - Getting Asian Americans INFORMED to Facilitate COVID-19 Testing and Vaccination N/A
Recruiting NCT05547893 - Clinical Learning Through Extended Immersion in Medical Simulation (CLEIMS)-A New Approach to Teaching Clinical Ethics N/A
Recruiting NCT06351007 - Educational Program on Dietary Adherence and Nutritional Knowledge in Chronic Kidney Disease Patients (EPAK) N/A
Completed NCT05963802 - Evaluation of the Efficacy and Usability of Artificial Intelligence (ChatGPT) for Health Sciences Students N/A
Completed NCT05435482 - Facilitating COVID-19 Test for Korean Americans Through Korean Schools in Northern California N/A
Terminated NCT03278366 - Effects of Dance Practice in Elementary Students N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06001879 - The Study Focuses on Training Newly Employed Nurses With Two Groups Interventional (Simulation Training) & Control (Brochure) Group Using BLS -AHA 2020 Using Simulation, the Test Includes Pre-test & 2 Post-test Surveys to Assess Knowledge, Practice & Confidence Level. N/A
Completed NCT02616536 - Comparison Between Teaching Methods on Knowledge Gain of Physiotherapy Students N/A
Completed NCT06204601 - The Effect Of Education Given According to Meleıs' Transitional Theory to Patients With Pacemaker N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04859205 - The SUPPORT-Pro Online Platform for Healthcare Professionals Treating Individuals Living With T1D N/A
Recruiting NCT04728022 - Brain Research Apprenticeships in New York at Columbia N/A
Completed NCT03071367 - A Comparison of Clinical Simulation and Classical Learning for Airway Management in Medical Students N/A
Completed NCT05189340 - Development of Discharge Education Video for Solid Organ Transplant Recipients N/A
Completed NCT06035822 - Assessment of Nursing Students' Performance During Guided Debriefing With the Lasater Clinical Judgement Rubric N/A