Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04665479 |
Other study ID # |
123456 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 12, 2021 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
February 2023 |
Source |
Vanderbilt University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The overall purpose of this study is to test the feasibility of a web-based storytelling
intervention for rural-dwelling children (ages 8-17) with serious advanced illnesses.
There is a growing need for home-based end-of-life and palliative care for children with
serious illnesses. While palliative care interventions offered in home settings are
significantly lacking, the problems are magnified by substantial gaps in access to palliative
care for rural populations. Web-based recruitment and intervention methods have the potential
to access hard-to-reach rural populations and provide a cost-effective health care. In
particular, legacy-making (i.e., actions/behaviors aimed at being remembered) is one strategy
to help decrease suffering and improve psychosocial outcomes for children with serious
illness and end of life needs. Storytelling has successfully documented child legacies and
may be an ideal format for children. Guided by our existing, web-based digital storytelling
intervention and previous work, this project will offer a remotely-delivered legacy-making
intervention to rural-dwelling children with diverse serious, advanced health conditions and
their parents.
Description:
Background: Nearly 1 million children between the ages of 8 and 17 years worldwide are
estimated to be in need of palliative care. These children and their parents are at
substantial risk for suffering and long-term morbidity. Pediatric palliative care
interventions have primarily focused on children with cancer, despite children with cancer
only representing 30 to 40% of patients receiving pediatric palliative care services. Despite
parents preferring that children with serious illnesses die at home, nearly two-thirds of
children die in hospital or care facilities. The need for home-based end-of-life and
palliative care is critical for this vulnerable population, yet interventions offered in home
settings are significantly lacking. Risks are magnified by substantial gaps in access to
palliative care for rural populations. Challenges to care for rural-dwelling children with
serious illnesses and their caregivers include lack of pediatric-focused local healthcare
resources; need to move residence; disruption to family life; missed school; financial
burdens from missed work and costs associated with food, gas, and housing; and a lack of
communication between urban and rural healthcare providers. Thus, the burden for children
with serious illnesses and their parents may be greater for those living in rural versus
urban communities.
Legacy-making (i.e., actions/behaviors aimed at being remembered) is one strategy to help
decrease suffering and improve psychosocial outcomes for individuals with serious illness and
end of life needs. Storytelling has successfully documented child legacies and may be an
ideal format for children. Our interdisciplinary team, rooted in nursing's unique
perspective, has successfully developed and tested a digital storytelling intervention in
pediatric oncology. Parents reported that the intervention facilitated "conversations with
[ill child] that I otherwise wouldn't have had." One parent said, "This project was really a
neat way for [ill child] to express himself…. He loved picking out photos and thinking about
his favorites…. we worked together, and it really did create a bond." Research in this field
has yet to expand outside of oncology or to rural settings, and we have significantly
modified our existing digital storytelling intervention based on parent input to further
increase its effect. In the proposed project, guided by our conceptual framework based on our
previous work and existing theory, our goal is to expand to non-cancer pediatric patients and
determine the feasibility of our newly adapted intervention for rural-dwelling children with
diverse serious, advanced conditions and their parents.
Objective/Hypothesis: The overall purpose of this study is to test the feasibility of a
web-based storytelling intervention for rural-dwelling children (ages 8-17) with serious
advanced illnesses.
Specific aims are to: (1) determine feasibility and acceptability of a digital storytelling
intervention for rural-dwelling children with serious illness; (2) determine the feasibility
of data collection procedures, and (3) determine child and parent perceptions of the benefits
of storytelling.
Study Design: One group pre- and post-test clinical trial design will be used. A total of 30
children with any progressively declining (acute or chronic) life-threatening diagnosis per
parent report (aged 8 to 17) and their primary parent caregivers will be recruited via
Facebook (N=30 dyads; 60 total participants). Dyads will participate in a nurse-delivered
intervention that will guide children to create electronic digital storyboards about
themselves during 6 sessions over 6 weeks. A trained nurse will deliver sessions averaging 1
hour each via Zoom. Dyads will receive a final digital story that plays in a cinematic
format. Participants will be asked to complete baseline and post-intervention measures,
attempting to assess following outcome variables: (a) child psychological distress, (b)
parent psychological distress, (c) parent-child communication, (d) family relationships, and
(e) program satisfaction.