A Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of Intervention for Children and Young People Experiencing Family Substance Use
NCT ID: NCT06089447
Last Updated: 2023-10-18
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
Get a concise snapshot of the trial, including recruitment status, study phase, enrollment targets, and key timeline milestones.
UNKNOWN
NA
50 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-10-31
2025-09-30
Brief Summary
Review the sponsor-provided synopsis that highlights what the study is about and why it is being conducted.
Related Clinical Trials
Explore similar clinical trials based on study characteristics and research focus.
The Experiences of Children and Caregivers Given PICU Storybooks
NCT04041401
Evaluating a Single-session Mental Health Intervention for UK University Students
NCT05093816
The Effect of a Nature-based, Self-help Intervention on Mental Wellbeing
NCT06513793
The Family Foundations Trial
NCT07126379
Impact of an Interactive Film on Resilience, Wellbeing, and Help-Seeking in School-Aged Youth
NCT06807931
Detailed Description
Dive into the extended narrative that explains the scientific background, objectives, and procedures in greater depth.
To determine whether a full trial is justified; To determine the feasibility and acceptability of the story-based intervention in improving psychological wellbeing and emotional literacy in children and young people experiencing familial substance use; To establish the effect size on the co-primary outcomes for a sample size calculation for a definitive trial.
To establish the feasibility of the intervention, we will collect data on the primary outcome for at least 80% of the recruitment target, and have an attrition rate that does not exceed 40%. A definitive trial will be justified if we are able to successfully recruit and retain participants in the trial, and if both the trial procedures and intervention are deemed to be acceptable to participants. Although the primary aim of pilot RCTs is to answer questions related to feasibility, an important secondary aim is to determine whether there is a signal of efficacy so as to inform the decision to progress to a definitive trial (Beets et al., 2021). The between-group effects will determine whether there is a signal of efficacy in favour of the Shadow of Tallystick Valley intervention and further support the need for a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT). A signal of efficacy will be considered to be found if the between-group effect size on the co-primary outcomes is in favour of the intervention. Where these conditions are met, this study will therein provide the parameters needed to estimate the sample size for a definitive RCT. We will assess whether the study design is acceptable to participants using recruitment and retention rates (i.e., study and intervention uptake and dropout rates) and qualitative interviews with participants.
The intervention will be offered to children and young people already connected with CGL. Children and young people are referred to the service via a referral from an adult known to them. This can include (but is not limited to) family members, social workers, teachers, school staff, substances, or other youth worker professionals.
Recruitment methods:
Study advert and information pack will be shared by staff across the service with all children and young people who meet the inclusion criteria. If the child or young person wants to proceed, both they and their parent or caregiver must provide either written or verbal consent. Consent will be collected by the assigned support worker at Change Grow Live.
If in the instance a participant withdraws their consent, they will have two weeks after the intervention has been delivered to do so and relevant data will be removed and destroyed. Beyond the two week mark, the data will be written up. If a parent/ caregiver withdraws their consent, CGL would discuss the parents' concerns with them in the hope they can resolve them. If parents/caregiver consent is still withdrawn and the child is under 13, the participant will no longer be involved in the study and relevant data will be destroyed. If in the instance the parent/caregiver withdraws consent for a young person who is over 13 years of age and Gillick Competent, the young person will be able to continue in the study. This is inline with CGL's policy and procedures. If in the instance the parent / caregiver withdraws consent for a child below the age of 13 years, the child or young person will be withdrawn from the study.
The target sample size is based on guidelines by Whitehead et al. (2015) for a pilot trial prior to a main trial with 90% power and two-sided 5% significance expecting a small to medium effect size. We plan to recruit 25 participants per arm (50 in total).
Experimental Design
The present study is a single-blind external pilot randomised controlled trial with two parallel arms including optional qualitative feedback. Support Workers will children and young people (aged between 7 and 18 years). Interested participants will be given a participant information sheet. After reading the PIS, if potential participants are interested in participating in the trial, they will complete an eligibility assessment to determine whether they meet the inclusion/exclusion criteria. If the participant meets the eligibility criteria, they will be invited to complete a consent form. Prospective participants will not be able to progress in the trial without completing the consent statement.
Once participants have provided consent and consent has been given from parent/carer, participants will be allocated a unique ID code and asked to complete the baseline (T0) assessment. A file linking the participants' contact information with the unique IDs will be stored securely in a password-protected file in a OneDrive folder held on the University of Surrey's system. The PI will have the password for this file and give access to this to other members of the research team as needed. The password will not be shared outside of the research team. The T0 assessment can be completed either online or in person. There will be video instructions on how to complete the questionnaires for children and young people to then complete them independently. These videos will be produced after ethical approval so that the information conveyed is in line with the approved protocol and study materials. After the T0 assessment has been completed, participants will be randomly allocated to either receive the immediate intervention arm or a wait-list control group. The outcome of this randomisation will be emailed to the PI and will be logged in the secure, password protected file. The randomisation will be conducted using the simple randomisation function available from Sealed Envelope. Participants will not know which arm they have been allocated to. The support workers will deliver the intervention with the children and young people allocated to the control group of the study. They will have received at least one full day of training designed and delivered by CGL's National Hidden Head Lead. Participants will be contacted 18 weeks post-randomisation to complete the T1 assessment. The T1 assessment can be completed in person or online depending on participants preference. The T1 assessment will replicate the T0 assessment. After completing the T1 assessment, participants will be presented with an end of trial debrief statement.
Data Collection The trial will utilise a mixed methods approach, collecting both quantitative and qualitative data. The quantitative data will be collected at T0 and T1. The qualitative data will be collected from the intervention group in the form of written feedback form or an audio recording after the T1 assessment. Data collection should not involve contact with adults outside of CGL but must have independence to allow for adequate blinding. The data can be collected either online via Qualtrics or in hard copy. There is the potential to have video instructions on how to complete the questionnaires for children and young people to then complete them independently.
The main trial data will be entered into SPSS by the principal investigator. The items will be coded and scored in line with the original questionnaire protocols. A random selection of 20% of the data will be checked against the source (i.e. hard copies of questionnaires) to ensure data quality.
The Principal Investigator will act as the data custodian. The data will be owned by the lead organisation, the University of Surrey.
Data analysis All of the variables will be summarised using descriptive statistics by arm at each time point. We will calculate Cohen's d between-group effect sizes with 95% confidence intervals, comparing the T1 scores of the intervention versus control arms, adjusting effects for the baseline scores using an ANCOVA. The level of missing data for all outcome measures will be reported. As the present study is a pilot trial, we will not be testing any hypotheses and are instead testing evidence for a signal of efficacy in the desired direction.
The research process data will be used to understand the rates of recruitment and retention at all stages of the study. We will report the number of participants who completed and dropped out at each stage of the trial in the form of a CONSORT diagram. The quantitative adherence data will be the number of sessions completed with a child or young person and used to understand the degree of engagement with the intervention amongst participants. We will report the responses using descriptive statistics and describe any patterns that can be observed.
All of the data collected over the course of the study will be collected, stored and maintained in line with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) (Information Commissioner's Office, 2018) . Any hard copies will be scanned so as to become electronic documents. The hard copies will be destroyed. Electronic documents/data will all be stored within a University of Surrey OneDrive folder and protected with a password, accessed only by the research team. The PI will have all of the passwords and share these with members of the research team as needed. No one outside of the research team will have access to the passwords. The PI will assume responsibility for ensuring adherence to the data security protocol.
Data will be retained in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) (Information Commissioner's Office, 2018) and (Medical Research Council, 2012) policies on data storage and archiving. Once the data analysis has been finalised, all anonymised data will be archived at the University of Surrey for up to 10 years. The anonymised data will be retained indefinitely by the PI.
Ethical considerations Consent to take part in this study will be informed. All participants and parents/carers of participants will be given the Participant Information Sheet (PIS) and will not be limited in terms of the amount of time they want to read through it. All participants will be told within the PIS and the consent forms that they can withdraw from the research study at any point. Participants will be asked to sign an item on the consent form that confirms that they are aware of their right to withdraw, and that they are not obligated to provide a reason for leaving the study.
All of the data collected within the research study will be treated as confidential. Identifiable data will not be shared outside of the research team. The study will comply with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and Data Protection Act 2018, which require data to be de-identified as soon as it is practical to do so. Participants will be identified on all documents (both hard copy and electronic) containing research data using a unique participant ID code. All documents will be stored securely and only accessible by the research team. The research team will safeguard the privacy of participants' data.
Participants will be informed within the PIS and consent form that anything they share over the course of the study will be treated as confidential, except for where this information puts themselves or other people at risk. Where confidentiality needs to be broken for safeguarding reasons, the information will only be shared with persons who have a responsibility to monitor and minimise this risk (e.g. s, personal tutors, university counselling team, local safeguarding authorities, mental health services). Participants will be asked to sign an item on the consent form that confirms that they understand our confidentiality policy.
Participants will be reimbursed for their time and effort at a rate of £5 for pre and £5 for post questionnaires completed (£10 in total) in the form of vouchers.
Conditions
See the medical conditions and disease areas that this research is targeting or investigating.
Study Design
Understand how the trial is structured, including allocation methods, masking strategies, primary purpose, and other design elements.
RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
Review each arm or cohort in the study, along with the interventions and objectives associated with them.
Control Group
Participants will receive the intervention immediately
A story based intervention called 'The Shadow of Tallystick Valley'
'The Shadows of Tallystick Valley' is a story based intervention for CYP aged 7 - 14 years aimed at supporting the psychological wellbeing and resilience of those affected by familial substance misuse. It has been designed by Book of Beasties, a developer of games and educational content, in collaboration with the charity Change Grow Live, who support those experiencing substance misuse and CYP affected by familial substance misuse in the UK. The wellbeing resource harnesses protective factors, such as respectful and caring conversations with professionals (Wangansteen and Westby, 2019), to facilitate a safe and supportive environment aimed towards understanding the CYPs experience, support their psychological wellbeing and building resilience and coping skills. It uses fictional narratives, including characters that represent particular topics which act as drivers for engagement.
Waitlist Group
Participants will be allocated to a waitlist group and will receive the intervention aft 6 months.
A story based intervention called 'The Shadow of Tallystick Valley'
'The Shadows of Tallystick Valley' is a story based intervention for CYP aged 7 - 14 years aimed at supporting the psychological wellbeing and resilience of those affected by familial substance misuse. It has been designed by Book of Beasties, a developer of games and educational content, in collaboration with the charity Change Grow Live, who support those experiencing substance misuse and CYP affected by familial substance misuse in the UK. The wellbeing resource harnesses protective factors, such as respectful and caring conversations with professionals (Wangansteen and Westby, 2019), to facilitate a safe and supportive environment aimed towards understanding the CYPs experience, support their psychological wellbeing and building resilience and coping skills. It uses fictional narratives, including characters that represent particular topics which act as drivers for engagement.
Interventions
Learn about the drugs, procedures, or behavioral strategies being tested and how they are applied within this trial.
A story based intervention called 'The Shadow of Tallystick Valley'
'The Shadows of Tallystick Valley' is a story based intervention for CYP aged 7 - 14 years aimed at supporting the psychological wellbeing and resilience of those affected by familial substance misuse. It has been designed by Book of Beasties, a developer of games and educational content, in collaboration with the charity Change Grow Live, who support those experiencing substance misuse and CYP affected by familial substance misuse in the UK. The wellbeing resource harnesses protective factors, such as respectful and caring conversations with professionals (Wangansteen and Westby, 2019), to facilitate a safe and supportive environment aimed towards understanding the CYPs experience, support their psychological wellbeing and building resilience and coping skills. It uses fictional narratives, including characters that represent particular topics which act as drivers for engagement.
Eligibility Criteria
Check the participation requirements, including inclusion and exclusion rules, age limits, and whether healthy volunteers are accepted.
Inclusion Criteria
* Child: 7 - 10
* YP: 11 - 14
* Able to read age appropriate materials independently;
* Have someone in their family using alcohol and/or substances;
* Have received parental/caregiver consent to take part in the study;
* Have an assigned support worker
Exclusion Criteria
* They are currently engaging in self-harm, including all forms of self harm as set out by Mind (2020), and/or have plans to end their life;all forms of self harm
* Have not given consent to take part in the study;
* Have not received parent or caregiver consent to take part in the study.
7 Years
14 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
Meet the organizations funding or collaborating on the study and learn about their roles.
University of Surrey
OTHER
Responsible Party
Identify the individual or organization who holds primary responsibility for the study information submitted to regulators.
India Smith
Trainee Clinical Psychologist
Principal Investigators
Learn about the lead researchers overseeing the trial and their institutional affiliations.
India Smith
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Student
Locations
Explore where the study is taking place and check the recruitment status at each participating site.
University of Surrey
Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom
Countries
Review the countries where the study has at least one active or historical site.
Central Contacts
Reach out to these primary contacts for questions about participation or study logistics.
Facility Contacts
Find local site contact details for specific facilities participating in the trial.
References
Explore related publications, articles, or registry entries linked to this study.
Beets MW, von Klinggraeff L, Weaver RG, Armstrong B, Burkart S. Small studies, big decisions: the role of pilot/feasibility studies in incremental science and premature scale-up of behavioral interventions. Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2021 Sep 10;7(1):173. doi: 10.1186/s40814-021-00909-w.
Whitehead AL, Julious SA, Cooper CL, Campbell MJ. Estimating the sample size for a pilot randomised trial to minimise the overall trial sample size for the external pilot and main trial for a continuous outcome variable. Stat Methods Med Res. 2016 Jun;25(3):1057-73. doi: 10.1177/0962280215588241. Epub 2015 Jun 19.
Information Commissioner's Office. (2018). Guide to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/guide-to-the-general-data-protection-regulation-gdpr
Medical Research Council. (2012). Good research practice: Principles and guidelines. In MRC ethics series.
Mind. (2020). Self Harm. Accessible via self-harm-2020.pdf (mind.org.uk)
Other Identifiers
Review additional registry numbers or institutional identifiers associated with this trial.
FHMS 22-23 237 EGA
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
More Related Trials
Additional clinical trials that may be relevant based on similarity analysis.