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BRIGHT Coaching Program for Families

McGill University logo

McGill University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Child Developmental Delay
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Parenting
Mental Health Wellness 1
Parent-child Problem
Parent-Child Relations
Child Development Disorder

Treatments

Behavioral: Online parent education
Behavioral: Online peer support
Behavioral: Coaching

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03880383
2017-3159

Details and patient eligibility

About

Children with, or at elevated risk for, brain-based developmental disabilities can experience lifelong consequences and challenges throughout their development. In particular, preschool years (3-6 years of age) can be stressful as families wait to get services and care for their child. Nationally and internationally, service delivery models during this critical period are not standardized, and differ within and across provinces and across patient conditions, leading to long wait times, service gaps and duplications.

This study has two main hypotheses:

  1. A standardized approach to "coaching" (i.e. coach + online education tools + peer support network) is feasible in the real-life context, and acceptable to caregivers and can be delivered across multiple sites in urban/suburban/rural settings.
  2. A standardized approach to "coaching" enhances parental health (parents' empowerment and sense of competence, quality of life, and minimizes parenting stress), family health care experience (care coordination experience and process of care) at similar health care cost (economic analysis), when compared to usual and locally available care.

Full description

Rationale:

Children with, or at elevated risk for, brain-based developmental disabilities experience chronic lifelong functional consequences with new challenges emerging at each stage of development. In the preschool years (3-6 years), needs arise from vulnerabilities linked to critical and newly emerging cognitive, speech, motor, behavioural and social skills. The preschool years are a time of stress for families as young child awaits assessment, or even as they receive services for brain-based disorders. Similarly, the system and society struggle to meet needs of families in a timely and appropriate manner in the face of escalating costs. Given these struggles, there is a need to examine whether a health-coach style of intervention coupled with parent education delivered through an online platform can be effective in empowering families, by delivering information, providing social (parent to parent) supports, and decreasing demand on health and developmental services. This innovation provides a significant service re-design in a system at critical point of transition.

Study objective:

To evaluate the feasibility and the effectiveness (changes in parent health, developmental service utilization and cost effectiveness) of a self-management intervention (including developmental coach, online education tools and support network), when compared to usual and locally available care in service delivery practices, for parents of preschool children with suspected developmental delays.

Methodology / Study design:

This is a prospective, two-arm pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT) comparing a developmental coaching and e-health services intervention plus usual care to the control state in which children and their families receive usual and locally available care over an 18-month time frame. The target population for this novel service delivery model is children aged 1.5 to 4.5 years old who are at a high risk for or suspected of having developmental delays, that are beginning to manifest impairments in developmental domains (e.g. motor, cognitive, speech, social and/or behavioural). In the first year, a technology-supported health coach service delivery model will be developed in conjunction with families. A feasibility/acceptability pilot study was conducted to ensure that the intervention is feasible in the real life context across 4 participating Canadian provinces.

Participants:

Eligible children and their families will be recruited to include children who are 1.5 to 4.5 years at the age at enrolment. Children will be living in four diverse parts of Canada to ensure national representation and future scalability: Vancouver; Winnipeg; Montreal and Halifax. Participants' postal codes will be analyzed to ensure representation: rural/remote, small urban and large urban/metro representation with purposeful sampling as required. From the patient population perspective, two different groups that are likely to manifest new global developmental delays at this stage will be recruited. They are at high risk for brain-based developmental delays, however some will have no delay and others will have mild, moderate or severe delays.

Study procedures: Intervention and control Recruitment begins with family contact. Families are contacted via the centre to which they were referred for developmental diagnosis and assessment. A member of the clinical team will ask if they are interested to learn more about the BRIGHT Coaching study. If interested, the families' contact information will be shared with the local research assistant (RA) overseeing the trial. The RA will speak to a parent by phone and follow up with an introductory letter by mail explaining the procedures of the study, together with the consent form and a self-addressed stamped envelope to return to the RA if interested in participating. After 2 weeks, if no consent form is received, the RA will call the family once again to determine their interest in participating. Once consent is signed, participants will conduct baseline assessments including documentation of their care and social networks, and be randomized using a computer-generated algorithm; randomization will be stratified by site. The allocation ratio for intervention or control will be 1:1 for each site.

Enrollment

306 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 54 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Children are beginning to manifest delays in one or more domains of development, and they have been newly referred to a service to get assessed, diagnosed, and/ or for therapeutic intervention. Their families are thus in the early stages of their journey of getting assessment, diagnosis and/or intervention.

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Children between the ages of 1.5 years to 4.5 years at enrolment;
  • Suspected or confirmed delays in one or more developmental domains (such as motor, cognitive, speech, social and/or behavioural).
  • Has been newly referred to a given service agency/program for assessment and/or intervention services (some services may have been provided in the past in infancy)
  • Willing to participate in the study for 3 assessments: at enrolment; 8 months later, and 12 months later.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Non-English or non-French speaking;
  • Unwilling or unable to participate in intermittent assessments (by phone or in-person).
  • Do not have access on a routine basis to the internet through a desktop, laptop or mobile.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

306 participants in 2 patient groups

Group 1 - Coaching
Experimental group
Description:
Upon enrollment to the study, parents in this group will have immediate access to the full intervention: * Coaching: Telephone contact with coaches, who will provide information, education and support about the child's development. Coaching will be adapted to family needs, situation, preferences and child's condition. * Online parent education: Parents will be provided access to empowering online tools, such as educational resources, chosen or developed by other parents and researchers. * Peer support tools: Parents will have access to a secure online social media tool to connect to other parents going through a similar experience. Through this tool, parents can help support each other, and share their experiences and knowledge.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Coaching
Behavioral: Online peer support
Behavioral: Online parent education
Group 2- Partial and delayed coaching
Other group
Description:
Parents in this group will have delayed and partial access to coaching, at the end of the 18-month period. Parents in this group will have a one-time session with a developmental coach who can give them guidance about their child's development. Parents in this group will also then get access to online parent education and peer support tools, indefinitely, until the online platform is de-activated. \* Both arms/groups\* will obtain usual care for their child, in addition and independent of full or partial coaching.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Online peer support
Behavioral: Online parent education

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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