Monzon Alexandra D, Clements Mark A, Patton Susana R
University of Kansas College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Clinical Child Psychology, USA.
Children's Mercy Hospital and Clinics, Endocrine/Diabetes Clinical Research, USA.
J Telemed Telecare. 2024 Apr;30(3):505-513. doi: 10.1177/1357633X211067074. Epub 2021 Dec 21.
Group engagement is an important component of video-based telehealth interventions, yet this construct remains understudied. In the present study, we applied a multidimensional conceptualization of group engagement in two video-based telehealth interventions that either aimed to reduce fear of hypoglycemia or diabetes distress in parents of children with type 1 diabetes. We examined variability in group engagement across parents and assessed the relationship between parents' level of group engagement and their treatment outcomes.
Twenty-nine parents participated in one of two manualized, closed-group, telehealth interventions and completed outcome measures pre- and post-treatment. We behaviorally coded telehealth sessions based on six dimensions of group engagement using the Group Engagement Measure (inter-rater reliability = 0.94). We examined correlations between group engagement dimensions, parent psychosocial well-being, and child hemoglobin A1c. Further, we examined independent sample -tests to assess differences between treatment groups.
Mean parent age was 37.69 ± 6.83 years, mean child age was 7.69 ± 3.76 years, and mean child hemoglobin A1c was 8.06 ± 1.27% (41.4% had a hemoglobin A1c <7.5%). Parents who spent more time attending to other group member's issues, reported lower hypoglycemia fear at post-treatment, and parents who showed more active support of the group leader's purpose/goals during the session also reported fewer depressive symptoms at post-treatment.
We identify several dimensions of group engagement that are associate with improved parent psychosocial and child hemoglobin A1c outcomes. Intervention designs that use group engagement to guide treatment planning or inform treatment-related decisions in video-based telehealth interventions could help families achieve more optimal treatment outcomes.
群体参与是基于视频的远程医疗干预的一个重要组成部分,但这一概念仍未得到充分研究。在本研究中,我们在两项基于视频的远程医疗干预中应用了群体参与的多维概念化,这两项干预旨在减轻1型糖尿病患儿家长对低血糖的恐惧或糖尿病困扰。我们研究了家长群体参与程度的差异,并评估了家长群体参与水平与其治疗结果之间的关系。
29名家长参加了两项手册化、封闭组远程医疗干预中的一项,并在治疗前后完成了结果测量。我们使用群体参与度量表,基于群体参与的六个维度对远程医疗会话进行行为编码(评分者间信度=0.94)。我们研究了群体参与维度、家长心理社会幸福感和儿童糖化血红蛋白之间的相关性。此外,我们进行了独立样本检验,以评估治疗组之间的差异。
家长平均年龄为37.69±6.83岁,儿童平均年龄为7.69±3.76岁,儿童糖化血红蛋白平均为8.06±1.27%(41.4%的儿童糖化血红蛋白<7.5%)。花更多时间关注其他小组成员问题的家长在治疗后报告的低血糖恐惧较低,在会话期间对组长的目的/目标表现出更积极支持的家长在治疗后报告的抑郁症状也较少。
我们确定了群体参与的几个维度,这些维度与家长心理社会状况的改善和儿童糖化血红蛋白结果相关。在基于视频的远程医疗干预中,利用群体参与来指导治疗计划或为治疗相关决策提供信息的干预设计,可能有助于家庭实现更优的治疗结果。