Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Enrolling by invitation
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Congenital Heart Disease
  • Congenital Malformation
  • Hirschsprung Disease
  • Nutrition Disorder, Child
  • Pediatric Cancer
  • Preterm Birth
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: Non-RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Consecutive series of legal guardians to children fulfilling the inclusion criteria in each arm. The legal guardians will be asked to 1) be involved in the development of the eHealth application, 2) evaluate the eHealth application at home, or 3) serve as a control group receiving traditional follow-up after discharge.Masking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Supportive Care

Participation Requirements

Age
Younger than 47 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

The vision for the coming 6-year period is to establish multi-disciplinary research, designed to strengthen and advance the knowledgebase of eHealth as an aid for facilitating and supporting self-management among children with long-term illness and their families. The programme builds on interventio...

The vision for the coming 6-year period is to establish multi-disciplinary research, designed to strengthen and advance the knowledgebase of eHealth as an aid for facilitating and supporting self-management among children with long-term illness and their families. The programme builds on interventions and implementation in three research domains: (1) eHealth to enable and promote self-management in advanced paediatric care, (2) eHealth for early diagnosis and treatment in paediatric healthcare, and (3) Co-creation of multi-disciplinary knowledge for the translation of eHealth in practice. The overall goals of the research programme are to: Evaluate, advance and implement models of eHealth to improve self-management for children and adolescents with or at risk for long-term illness and their families for better allocation of family-, healthcare- and societal resources. Increase the knowledge of cultural factors and implementation strategies to facilitate implementation processes in general, and more specifically generate theoretical and methodological models on how to successfully implement eHealth in paediatric care. Enhance the translation and integration of new research findings within eHealth into care services and the wider society by supporting healthcare professionals in their provision of evidence-based care and by translating and communicating research results to them as well as stakeholders and families. Enhance the research proficiency of junior researchers in paediatric care and eHealth nationally and internationally through collaborative approaches in both inter- and multidisciplinary groups. Two features of healthcare systems today are easily detected: 1) a trend towards more reliance on the individual and family to take active part in the healthcare process - with self-management being a keyword, and 2) great expectations regarding the potential benefits of using modern information technology in the domain of health and health care. The complex and costly needs for care of an increasing number of children with long-term illness (LTI) i.e. an illness that lasts for three months or more, generally has a slow progression, and can be controlled but not cured [1]) is one of the most critical challenge for healthcare systems all over the world. In addition to poorer health, people with LTI generally have lower educational achievements, fewer economic opportunities, and higher rates of poverty. Ensuring healthy growth and development in children is a principal concern of all societies. In this context, eHealth is of special interest as an aid for facilitating and supporting self-management for children with and at risk for LTI. Self-management is the use of own time and money for individual and family health promotion. It is an ingredient in almost all measures for promoting health. Pure self-management in health relies on own efforts without formal intervention of health care services. On the other extreme, there are formal healthcare activities that require 100 percent of healthcare inputs for example surgery under anaesthesia. In most instances, both types of inputs are necessary - in varying degrees. The choice of self-management activities and its results depend on family-member preferences, knowledge, and attitudes. In order for healthcare system initiatives to be accepted and successful, they must be attuned to these characteristics. Individual tailoring is all the more important, the more reliance is on self-management. Thus, in the process of developing and evaluating new treatment modes, user participation is essential. eHealth is a broad concept as indicated by the WHO definition: "eHealth is the transfer of health resources and healthcare by electronic means", i.e. also including older techniques such as telemedicine. Great expectations are associated with the realisation of the term. It may: 1) increase communication between healthcare providers and patients, 2) increase accessibility and patient participation in healthcare, and 3) support information and data sharing between patients, family and health-service providers http://www.euro.who.int/en/ehealth. It might be observed that the term eHealth does not preclude the use of electronic means to improve communication between providers within the healthcare system, potentially increasing the internal efficiency of formal healthcare, without any direct effects on patients and families. Here, however, the focus is on the role of eHealth as an aid for facilitating and supporting self-management, i.e. a concern with a wider, societal perspective on the allocation of scarce resources for health. Cost-effectiveness is one of the ethical principles that are supposed to govern decisions on the allocation of scarce healthcare resources in Sweden. Thus, new healthcare technology should not be introduced if not proven cost-effective in comparison to existing (best) practice. Requirements for the economic evaluation of new healthcare technology exist in most Western countries. To date, economic evaluations of eHealth reported in the literature are scare and suffer from lack of randomised control trials (RTCs), small sample sizes, and the absence of high-quality data or appropriate measures. Paediatric healthcare is rapidly evolving towards outpatient and community-care and from public to parental responsibility. This form of care is however rarely backed-up with communication support. In Sweden and most Western countries, highly specialised paediatric healthcare is confined to few National Centres of Specialized Medicine (NCSM) http://www.socialstyrelsen.se/rikssjukvard. This means that following birth a large majority of children with congenital malformations are transported to hospitals far away from home for advanced surgery. Following discharge, the outermost medical and nursing competence for the child will be at the NCSM. International policy and practice aim for infants, older children and adolescents with LTI to be cared for at home as much as possible to reduce the distress of hospital admissions and to keep up the normal family life. Limited research exists on the effect of digital interactive care on parents and children. eHealth in the home setting is often preferred by parents, especially by parents of newborns but has still not been widely adopted. Digital techniques can aid safer post-operative healthcare at home and may reduce costs to patients and society. This in turn might lead to more confident use of self-management and an increased sense of security at home. In some areas in paediatric care telemedicine initiatives is shown to benefit resources, enrich the community, and improve care that ultimately serve to better patient health. Six clinical research projects are planned, illustrating complex, highly specialized, often long-term and costly decision-making challenges in paediatric care, for developing, evaluating implementing, and utilising different devices of eHealth technology. In addition, four more research projects will be performed in parallel to provide general analyses of eHealth in paediatric care and to facilitate and support economic, technical, cultural, and organisational analyses of the clinical data. Bridging the hospital care and safe care at home for children with LTI with the aid of eHealth is a vital clinical area, especially for professionals in nursing, physiotherapy and medicine. However, also for the scientific area in health science it is of great importance as eHealth change the communication between children, parents and health professionals. This is a new research area that needs to be explored. To develop, evaluate and implement eHealth devices in clinical care, an inter- and multidisciplinary approach is needed. Therefore, the investigators well-functioning and long-lasting clinical and research collaboration in health science, medicine, global health, health economics, technology, and social science has been enhanced to respond to the needs in paediatric care. Thereby, it is possible to address the important study of encounters with technology and various methods of communications and how eHealth aid can capture complex exchange of wellbeing and health, and feelings and perceptions of for example anxiety, stress levels, safety, many of which are culturally related. Also, values and contexts are sensitive to communication methods. The studies will therefore contribute significantly to the research area of eHealth as an aid for facilitating and supporting self-management in paediatric care, but not only. The programme also includes the research issue whether eHealth at the same time improves the allocation of scarce healthcare- and societal resources. The multi-method design including both qualitative and quantitative methods will enhance the understanding to advance and evaluate routines and practices for better physiological and psychological outcomes in children with LTI and their families. The clinical projects will also contribute to a deeper understanding on identifying risk factors for complications and how to prevent adverse events in care performed at home. In this programme, the focus is on eHealth solutions for situations where children and their families can be supported by enhanced communication for self-management with specialist professionals most commonly with specialist nurses. In such situations, it is important to find technical solutions that are both easy to use for all involved, easily accessible for families, and efficient to use for the professionals. Design options include web browser-based solutions, application-based solutions for larger mobile devices such as touchpads and application for mobile phones while observing the strict security rules for personal health information. An issue of accessibility is also to avoid economic demands on e.g. families not having access to appropriate equipment. Furthermore, relying on patient's equipment increases the technical demand and testing as the variation of equipment is huge, while the number of patients is comparatively small. Typically, technologies and applications develop at a high pace driven by commercial interests and may not be synchronised with a corresponding development of the understanding of possibilities and limitations of the applications in specific areas of care. Importantly, the studies within different clinical contexts and considering cost-effectiveness, technical development, cultural and implementation aspects contribute to the knowledge and understanding about how eHealth can reduce the information asymmetry between providers, developers and consumers for further implementation into clinical practices, policies, and procedures. This programme also provides a significant contribution to a grounded and evidence-based understanding of both possibilities and limitations of eHealth applications in this area not only in terms of their efficacy but also in terms of the possible ethical conflicts involved in the introduction of new technology.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04150120
Collaborators
  • Skane University Hospital
  • Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Inger Kristensson Hallström, PhD Lund University