CanChild, Department of Pediatrics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
CBT Associates of Toronto Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Services, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2021 Mar 26;11(3):e048756. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-048756.
Youth with brain-based disabilities (BBDs), as well as their parents/caregivers, often feel ill-prepared for the transfer from paediatric to adult healthcare services. To address this pressing issue, we developed the MyREADY Transition BBD App, a patient-facing e-health intervention. The primary aim of this randomised controlled trial (RCT) was to determine whether the App will result in greater transition readiness compared with usual care for youth with BBD. Secondary aims included exploring the contextual experiences of youth using the App, as well as the interactive processes of youth, their parents/caregivers and healthcare providers around use of the intervention.
We aimed to randomise 264 youth with BBD between 15 and 17 years of age, to receive existing services/usual care (control group) or to receive usual care along with the App (intervention group). Our recruitment strategy includes remote and virtual options in response to the current requirements for physical distancing due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We will use an embedded experimental model design which involves embedding a qualitative study within a RCT. The Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire will be administered as the primary outcome measure. Analysis of covariance will be used to compare change in the two groups on the primary outcome measure; analysis will be intention-to-treat. Interviews will be conducted with subsets of youth in the intervention group, as well as parents/caregivers and healthcare providers.
The study has been approved by the research ethics board of each participating site in four different regions in Canada. We will leverage our patient and family partnerships to find novel dissemination strategies. Study findings will be shared with the academic and stakeholder community, including dissemination of teaching and training tools through patient associations, and patient and family advocacy groups.
NCT03852550.
患有基于脑部残疾(BBD)的青年,以及他们的父母/照顾者,往往对从儿科到成人保健服务的过渡感到准备不足。为了解决这个紧迫的问题,我们开发了 MyREADY 过渡 BBD 应用程序,这是一种面向患者的电子健康干预措施。这项随机对照试验(RCT)的主要目的是确定该应用程序是否会使 BBD 青年在过渡准备方面比常规护理更好。次要目标包括探索使用该应用程序的青年的背景体验,以及围绕干预措施使用的青年、他们的父母/照顾者和医疗保健提供者的互动过程。
我们旨在将 264 名 15 至 17 岁患有 BBD 的青年随机分为两组,一组接受现有服务/常规护理(对照组),另一组接受常规护理和应用程序(干预组)。我们的招募策略包括远程和虚拟选项,以应对因 COVID-19 大流行而对身体距离的当前要求。我们将使用嵌入式实验模型设计,该设计涉及在 RCT 中嵌入定性研究。将使用过渡准备评估问卷作为主要结果衡量标准。协方差分析将用于比较两组在主要结果衡量标准上的变化;分析将采用意向治疗。将对干预组中的青年亚组、父母/照顾者和医疗保健提供者进行访谈。
该研究已获得加拿大四个不同地区的每个参与地点的研究伦理委员会的批准。我们将利用我们的患者和家庭伙伴关系来寻找新的传播策略。研究结果将与学术和利益相关者社区共享,包括通过患者协会和患者及家属倡导团体传播教学和培训工具。
NCT03852550。