Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Brain Diseases
  • Brain Injuries
  • Brain Injury, Chronic
  • Child Behavior
  • Childhood Brain Tumor
  • Family
  • Parenting
  • Rehabilitation
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Randomized Controlled TrialMasking: Double (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: Independent Outcome Assessor(s) will be blinded to group allocation. Participants will be provided with new IDs in final database, blinding researchers to which group is the intervention group during analysis.Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 6 years and 16 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

There is considerable knowledge about how to help children with ABI during the first, acute and post-acute stages. Yet, impairments are often long lasting and, due to the vulnerability of children's developing brain, new problems may emerge or become increasingly problematic over time. Children with...

There is considerable knowledge about how to help children with ABI during the first, acute and post-acute stages. Yet, impairments are often long lasting and, due to the vulnerability of children's developing brain, new problems may emerge or become increasingly problematic over time. Children with ABI may struggle at school and with peers, which can lead to or increase emotional difficulties, and reduce quality of life, affecting the children and their families. The local communities and the children's schools are, together with the families, often left responsible for dealing with the chronic challenges of pABI. Parents may experience considerable stress and develop emotional symptoms when a child suffers an ABI. As a result, the entire family may experience impaired functioning, which in turn may affect the long-term prognosis of the child with ABI. Eighty families will be included in the study: 40 in the intervention group and 40 in the control group. The children will have a clinical ABI diagnosis, verified injury related intracranial abnormalities, and be at least one year post injury at inclusion. The children and/or their families must report enduring cognitive, emotional, social or physical challenges related to the brain injury. The intervention will be conducted in collaboration with the children's families, schools and their local health care providers. It consists of individualized goal-oriented strategies adapted to the home- and school-setting. Goal attainment scaling will be applied. In addition, psychoeducation will be provided to the family and school/local care providers on topics related to the child's injury. A parent group session will be held for discussions and knowledge transfer concerning family challenges after pABI, such as communication skills and parenting. The intervention will include 7 individualized meetings with the family (7 sessions whereof most will be videoconferences, but with the possibility of 1-2 of the sessions being home visits), one parent group seminar and 4 sessions with school and local health care providers during a period of 4-5 months. Assessments will be conducted at baseline (T1), at the end of the intervention (T2, 4-5 months after inclusion) and one year after inclusion (T3). Baseline assessment includes a brief neuropsychological assessment of the children in addition to the outcome measures at T2 and T3. Outcome assessors will ble blinded to group allocation. Primary outcomes are change in parent-reported brain injury symptoms of the children and change in parenting self-efficacy. Secondary outcomes include change in child-rated severity of brain injury symptoms, change in unmet healthcare needs of the family, change in children's executive functioning in the home and school environment as assessed by parents, children and teachers, change in children's quality of life assessed by parents and children, change in family functioning, change in caregiver emotional symptoms, an evaluation of the intervention completed by parents, children and teachers in the intervention group, change in the perceived severity of the individually defined target outcome areas completed by children and parents, and change in goal attainment scaling in the intervention group. The findings of this study will contribute to enhanced clinical expertise within pABI-rehabilitation on a specialist health care level, and will also be relevant for a wide array of health care professionals in the community as well as the educational system and parents of children with ABI.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04798859
Collaborators
  • The Research Council of Norway
  • Oslo University Hospital
  • Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
  • Monash University
  • The Hospital of Vestfold
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Marianne Løvstad, PhD Sunnaas Rehabilitation Hospital and University of Oslo