Psychosocial Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Animal Assisted Activity on Biobehavioral Stress Responses of Hospitalized Children: A Randomized Control Trial
The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of a 10-minute therapy dog visitation (TDV) in reducing biobehavioral stress responses among hospitalized school-age children by comparing responses between TDV and non-TDV control groups.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 53 |
Est. completion date | January 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 7 Years to 17 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - understand English - alert and oriented to person, place, and time - able to complete study instruments - able to provide saliva specimens, and - consent from parent/legal guardian, and - assent from child. Exclusion Criteria: - currently taking hormone replacement, or steroidal antiinflammatory medications - in contact precautions at facility - diagnosed with Addison's or Cushing's disease, and - fears, phobias, or allergies to dogs. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston | Houston | Texas |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Anxiety as measured by the State Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAI-C) scale | State anxiety will be measured using the State Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAI-C), a widely used instrument with upper elementary or junior high school aged children. The instrument is composed of 20 statements that ask about how one feels at a particular moment in time with three responses from "very to not". Scores range from 20 to 80 and higher scores indicate a higher state of anxiety. Internal consistency has been demonstrated; researchers have reported acceptable reliability coefficients in hospitalized children ages 7-11 years old with Cronbach's a of .94. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Primary | Change in Positive Mood/Affect as measured by the 10-item Positive and Negative Affect Schedule for Children (10 PANAS-C) | The 10 PANAS-C is a 10 item youth self-report measure used in child and adolescent populations which asks youth to rate adjectives of varying mood states (5 negative and 5 positive affect adjectives) on how often they feel joyful, cheerful, happy, lively, and proud and miserable, mad, afraid, scared, and sad. The item responses use a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 ("very slightly or none at all") to 5 ("extremely"). The 10 item PANAS-C demonstrates acceptable validity and internal consistency estimates when compared to the full-length 27-item PANAS-C scale with alpha of .86 for the positive scale; .82 for the negative scale. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Primary | Change in Negative Mood/Affect as measured by the 10-item Positive and Negative Affect Schedule for Children (10 PANAS-C) | The 10 PANAS-C is a 10 item youth self-report measure used in child and adolescent populations which asks youth to rate adjectives of varying mood states (5 negative and 5 positive affect adjectives) on how often they feel joyful, cheerful, happy, lively, and proud and miserable, mad, afraid, scared, and sad. The item responses use a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 ("very slightly or none at all") to 5 ("extremely"). The 10 item PANAS-C demonstrates acceptable validity and internal consistency estimates when compared to the full-length 27-item PANAS-C scale with alpha of .86 for the positive scale; .82 for the negative scale. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Primary | Change in biological stress response as assessed by salivary cortisol levels | Saliva samples will be collected salivary cortisol (stress), CRP, and IL-1ß (inflammatory). Time of salivary collection will be between the times of 1000-1300 to control for circadian rhythmicity. On the day of batch assay all samples will be assayed using the Salimetrics ® kits (with acceptable precision and accuracy) with an enzyme immunoassay procedure following the manufacturer's directions. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Primary | Change in biological inflammatory stress responses as assessed by salivary C-reactive protein (CRP) levels | Saliva samples will be collected salivary cortisol (stress), CRP, and IL-1ß (inflammatory). Time of salivary collection will be between the times of 1000-1300 to control for circadian rhythmicity. On the day of batch assay all samples will be assayed using the Salimetrics ® kits (with acceptable precision and accuracy) with an enzyme immunoassay procedure following the manufacturer's directions. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Primary | Change in biological inflammatory stress responses as assessed by salivary interleukin-1beta (IL-1ß) levels | Saliva samples will be collected salivary cortisol (stress), CRP, and IL-1ß (inflammatory). Time of salivary collection will be between the times of 1000-1300 to control for circadian rhythmicity. On the day of batch assay all samples will be assayed using the Salimetrics ® kits (with acceptable precision and accuracy) with an enzyme immunoassay procedure following the manufacturer's directions. | immediately before session, immediately after session | No |
Secondary | Attachment level to pets as assessed by the Pet Attitude Scale (PAS) | Attachment to pets will be measured using the Pet Attitude Scale (PAS)Questionnaire.The PAS is an 18 item paper and pencil instrument with 7 Likert response statements which measures the favorableness of attitudes towards pets. Higher scores indicate more positive attitudes towards pets. Evidence of PAS-M is demonstrated with a Cronbach's alpha of .93. | immediately before session | No |
Secondary | Human-Animal Interaction as assessed by the Human-Animal Interaction Scale (HAIS) | The Human-Animal Interaction Scale (HAIS) is a newly developed questionnaire designed to measure behavioral interactions between animal and human which predict beneficial effects to humans (Fournier, Letson, Laitalia, & Krog, 2015). The HAIS is a 26 item Likert Scale with 5 Likert response statements ranging from "not at all" to "a great deal" and is completed by the participant after the TDV. | immediately after session | No |
Secondary | Human-Animal Interaction as assessed by the HAIS observer questionnaire | The HAIS observer questionnaire is a 24 item instrument completed by the research staff who quantifies behaviors with a percent or range in respect to the behavior observed. | immediately after session | No |
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