Feasibility of a Virtual Mental Health Intervention for Children with Congenital Heart Disease
NCT ID: NCT06659302
Last Updated: 2024-10-26
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
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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
NA
20 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-12-15
2025-12-31
Brief Summary
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This study will evaluate whether I-InTERACT North is a feasible intervention to implement in a step-care model and whether it is acceptable to families and impacts behavior and family functioning.
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Detailed Description
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The program combines online learning modules with 1:1 parent-coaching provided in the family's home by videoconferencing. Coaching sessions reinforce content and provide direct live coaching on parent-responsivity skills. There is flexibility in when online modules are completed and video conference sessions are scheduled, essential considerations for families balancing simultaneous work and child-care demands. One of the co-investigators (Williams) recently completed an open-label pre-post pilot feasibility trial of the transdiagnostic program at SickKids among families following neonatal medical illness/injury, an important cause of early behaviour and emotional regulation issues, with promising implementation outcomes and preliminary indices of improvement in child behaviour and parent stress.15 In this study, approximately 69% of eligible families contacted consented; and 86% enrolled completed the 7-session program. Parents and therapists reported high overall satisfaction with the program (100%), including acceptability of both the online modules (95%) and the videoconference sessions (95%). Child behaviour (d=0.50, See Figure 1) and parenting confidence and skill (d = 0.45, 0.64) also improved. Among participants who did not complete the program, families cited lack of time as the number one barrier to participation. This stepped care approach directly addresses this concern by matching mental health services to the needs of families.
The current study leverages an existing evidenced-based virtual program (I-InTERACT-North) that contains key components to address stress and child behaviour concerns within a stepped-care model: 1) general psychoeducation regarding the impact of medical diagnosis on children and families, and 2) graduated intensity in coaching of parenting strategies that foster responsiveness, warmth and consistency in the home. These two components have longstanding effectiveness in optimizing child behavior and reducing parental distress.
Study Purpose and Objectives 2.1 Primary Objectives
1. To evaluate whether a stepped-care adaptation of I-InTERACT-North can be implemented as planned, measuring fidelity, acceptability, and engagement.
2. To assess accrual and dropout rates at each step.
3. To investigate program fidelity between our site and the main intervention site
4. To examine participant and care provider perceptions regarding intervention acceptability and satisfaction.
5. To evaluate the relationship between parent and child needs, key social demographic factors and program participation
Secondary Objectives
1\) To measure the association between pre-and post-intervention short-term child behaviour and parent stress outcomes, parent responsivity and behavioural management skills, with hypothesized greater improvement following higher steps of engagement.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
SINGLE_GROUP
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Intro meeting
Participants will be sent baseline questionnaires online through REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture; see Appendix 1-email templates), a secure web application, and housed on a secure server. Participants will access a unique REDCap survey link via email to complete questionnaire measures after consenting to the study. After completion of the baseline questionnaires, participants will be connected with an I-InTERACT-North therapist for an Introductory Meeting to conduct a baseline elevation session. If participants do not wish to enroll in the full program, post-intervention questionnaires will be administered online through REDCap post step 1. If they wish to proceed to the full program, they will complete the questionnaires after step 2 or 3.
I-inTERACT North Step 1
Initial questionnaires completed followed by initial meeting with therapist for baseline evaluation.
Two sessions
Step 2: Parents who were identified as high stress/behaviour on the baseline questionnaires and/or based on the introduction meeting in Step 1, will be invited to participate in the initial two therapist-guided I-InTERACT-North sessions that focus on family stress and positive parenting strategies. Each session includes both an online psychoeducational module and a video conferencing session with a therapist. Session frequency is subject to change based on parent schedule preference and availability. Each session will last 60 minutes and will be video recorded (with consent from the participants). Sessions will be delivered to parents using Zoom, a secure online video conferencing platform (https://zoom.us/). If they wish to proceed to the full program, they will complete the questionnaires after step 3.
I-inTERACT North step 2
Two online modules completed by family plus two online zoom coaching sessions with therapist.
Full Program
Step 3: Families will be invited to participate in the full I-InTERACT-North program. The full program will provide an additional 5 online modules with live therapist videoconference coaching sessions. All sessions are strongly encouraged but for parents who do not complete the additional sessions, we will track what is completed and parents may still complete outcome measures. Based on previous work, average time of completion for the full program is 8-12 weeks. Each session will last 60 minutes and will be video recorded (with consent from the participants). Sessions will be delivered to parents using Zoom, a secure online video conferencing platform (https://zoom.us/). Before each session, parents will receive a meeting invitation link via email. After completing the program, participants will complete online questionnaires through REDCap. All participants will be invited to complete study follow-up questionnaires.
I-inTERACT North
Full program will consist of an additional 5 sessions with online modules and virtual coaching sessions with therapist.
Interventions
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I-inTERACT North Step 1
Initial questionnaires completed followed by initial meeting with therapist for baseline evaluation.
I-inTERACT North step 2
Two online modules completed by family plus two online zoom coaching sessions with therapist.
I-inTERACT North
Full program will consist of an additional 5 sessions with online modules and virtual coaching sessions with therapist.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* parent of a child aged 3 to 9 years,
* parent reported concerns regarding their child's externalizing behaviour
* child is followed in cardiology clinic at Alberta Children's Hospital.
* parent is able to speak and read English.
Exclusion Criteria
* Significant major medical issues requiring ongoing inpatient care
* Currently participating in an equivalent family/parent therapy program (e.g., Incredible Years Parenting Program (IYPP), Positive Parenting Program (Triple P))
* Inability to read/write and communicate in English
* Inability to consent or complete study measures electronically (online)
ALL
No
Sponsors
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The Hospital for Sick Children
OTHER
Alberta Children's Hospital
OTHER
University of Calgary
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Marsha Vasserman
Pediatric Neuropsychologist
Central Contacts
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References
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Burek B, Ford MK, Hooper M, Green R, Kohut SA, Andrade BF, Ravi M, Sananes R, Desrocher M, Miller SP, Wade SL, Williams TS. Transdiagnostic feasibility trial of internet-based parenting intervention to reduce child behavioural difficulties associated with congenital and neonatal neurodevelopmental risk: introducing I-InTERACT-North. Clin Neuropsychol. 2021 Jul;35(5):1030-1052. doi: 10.1080/13854046.2020.1829071. Epub 2020 Oct 8.
Wiggins TL, Sofronoff K, Sanders MR. Pathways Triple P-positive parenting program: effects on parent-child relationships and child behavior problems. Fam Process. 2009 Dec;48(4):517-30. doi: 10.1111/j.1545-5300.2009.01299.x.
Masten AS, Hubbard JJ, Gest SD, Tellegen A, Garmezy N, Ramirez M. Competence in the context of adversity: pathways to resilience and maladaptation from childhood to late adolescence. Dev Psychopathol. 1999 Winter;11(1):143-69. doi: 10.1017/s0954579499001996.
Antonini TN, Raj SP, Oberjohn KS, Cassedy A, Makoroff KL, Fouladi M, Wade SL. A pilot randomized trial of an online parenting skills program for pediatric traumatic brain injury: improvements in parenting and child behavior. Behav Ther. 2014 Jul;45(4):455-68. doi: 10.1016/j.beth.2014.02.003. Epub 2014 Feb 13.
Cohen GH, Tamrakar S, Lowe S, Sampson L, Ettman C, Linas B, Ruggiero K, Galea S. Comparison of Simulated Treatment and Cost-effectiveness of a Stepped Care Case-Finding Intervention vs Usual Care for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder After a Natural Disaster. JAMA Psychiatry. 2017 Dec 1;74(12):1251-1258. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2017.3037.
Other Identifiers
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REB24-1232
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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