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Clinical Trial Summary

This is a study to determine if a video that utilizes a peer to teach self administration of subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone is both effective and well accepted by adolescent patients who are already receiving ongoing treatment with depot medroxyprogesterone by a medical provider via an inter muscular injection. Self administration can be done at home and therefore offers an alternative to traveling to a medical office.


Clinical Trial Description

Means of providing health education are rapidly evolving. Telemedicine has become an important modality to provide healthcare and improve access, and will likely be increasingly utilized beyond the COVID-19 pandemic. Telemedicine can effectively provide care and counseling to all age groups, including adolescents. Studies have demonstrated that over 80 percent of adolescents between the ages of 11 and 18 spend one to four hours a day online; searches for health-related information are common. Nevertheless, adolescents may face obstacles when previously familiar aspects of their medical care are abruptly moved online, particularly when discussing contraception. Although traditionally administered in the clinical space, injectable contraception has been shown to be attractive, effective, and well-tolerated by adolescents when subcutaneously self-administered, and can lead to improved continuation rates. The investigators have found that remotely teaching a patient how to self-administer a subcutaneous injection is challenging. The provider may be in a home office, and may not have access to the actual medication or the supplies to demonstrate technique. The patient may struggle to understand verbal instruction without a visual demonstration, resulting in ineffective medication administration. Instructional videos currently available online are not specific to adolescents who use self-administered injectable contraception. Peer education can be relatable and effective for adolescent patients. The investigators propose that self-administration of subcutaneous injectable contraception may be taught using a peer-to-peer video as a synchronous or asynchronous adjunct to consultation with the healthcare professional. Adolescents may be instructed to watch the video demonstration to help inform them about proper technique and ensure safe administration of their medication while at home. This study aims to validate an existing video as an effective teaching tool by assessing metrics such as clarity of the instructions, rate of error, and satisfaction with the video teaching method to the investigators' target population. The video was filmed in accordance with Tufts Medical Center Department of Marketing and Communications policies and the adolescent participant in the video was appropriately consented by a parent/guardian. The video was presented as an oral abstract at the North American Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology Annual Meeting in March 2021. Procedure: 1. Clinic schedules for the medical providers on the research team will be reviewed in advance and any patient that is under the age of 20 and receiving depot-medroxyprogesterone will be contacted by telephone in advance to offer participation in the project. 2. The telephone call will follow the attached script. Two attempts will be made to call patients. 3. If subject is interested in participating, a prescription for the subcutaneous version of depot-medroxyprogesterone will be sent to their pharmacy to be picked up by the subject prior to the office visit. 4. Subjects under 18 will be instructed that they must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. At the office visit, written consent/assent will be obtained. 5. Subject will be shown the instructional video, which is approximately 3 minutes long. Subject may view as many times as subject chooses. 6. Once ready, the healthcare provider from the research team will observe, without giving verbal instruction, the subject self administer a subcutaneous depot-medroxyprogesterone injection. 7. If at any point the provider feels that the subject is not performing the injection safely or correctly the healthcare provider will intervene to ensure that the medication is given correctly, and this will be recorded within the REDCap survey. 8. After the injection is given, the subject will fill out the REDCap survey, and the study team member administering injection will input observational data into REDCap. 9. Subject will be asked to repeat another questionnaire in REDCap at the time of the next injection which will be scheduled for 12 weeks later. The next visit is as per standard of care scheduling (this medication is routinely administered at approximately 12-week intervals). If the subject comes into the same office for the injection, the survey will be filled out in person. If the subject does not come into the same office, a link to the follow-up REDCap survey will be emailed to the subject with instructions on how to access the survey. Email addresses will be confirmed at the time of the first visit, as is routine for medical care. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04997499
Study type Interventional
Source Tufts Medical Center
Contact
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase N/A
Start date September 29, 2021
Completion date December 2026

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