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Development of an Online Program to Help Manage Chronic Pain in Children and Teenagers

U

University of Southampton

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Chronic Pain

Treatments

Other: Online Chronic Pain Management Intervention for Teenagers

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03992976
45429
19BO01 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This research seeks to develop an internet-based program to help teenagers manage pain at home using a variety of techniques from physiotherapy, medicine, psychology and nursing. This study uses interviews to investigate what content and features teenagers and their parents want to see in an online intervention for managing chronic pain in teenagers.

Full description

This research seeks to develop an internet-based programme to help teenagers manage pain at home using a variety of techniques that mirror clinical practice. This includes content from medicine, physiotherapy, nursing and psychological techniques, such as relaxation.

The study will use interviews (one semi-structured interview and one 'think-aloud' interview per participant) to explore the question: What content and features do young people with chronic pain, and their parents want to see in an online pain management intervention?

The study seeks to recruit a group of teenagers from Great Ormond Street Hospital, as well as a group of parents. After the first round of interviews, participants have the option to be contacted about the second round.

Recruitment for the first round of interviews will continue up until the point where no additional insights are found by adding new data to the analysis ('point of saturation'). We anticipate 30 teenagers and 30 parents will be sufficient. We hope to recruit young people with a mixture of ages and sexes, as well as a mixture of different pain diagnoses, and parents with varying backgrounds and sexes where possible.

The insights gathered from this study will help develop a new program for managing chronic pain in teenagers, which we aim to make available through the NHS. The internet-based intervention hopes to contribute to successful chronic pain management at home, and may be used as an adjunct to clinical services, such as the Pain Control Service at Great Ormond Street Hospital.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

12 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adolescents aged 12 to 17 years
  • Adolescents experiencing chronic pain of any type (minimum duration of three months).
  • Parents or legal guardians of adolescents, aged 12 to 17 years, who are experiencing chronic pain of any type (minimum duration of three months).

Exclusion criteria

  • Unable to communicate in fluent, spoken English.
  • Adolescents aged 18 years or over.
  • Adolescents with chronic cancer pain that are continuing to undergo treatments to eradicate their primary cancer or have received these treatments in the last three months (maintenance therapies are acceptable).

Trial design

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Teenagers with chronic pain
Description:
Semi-structured interviews followed by 'think-aloud' procedure in part two. Semi-structured interviews may last up to 1 hour and are audio-recorded. A pre-piloted interview schedule has been developed and will guide the conversation. 'Think-aloud' procedure involves showing participants some of the online content that has been developed on a computer screen, and asking them to say aloud their commentary on any aspects. Participants will be audio-recorded during the task, and it is not anticipated the task will take longer than 1 hour to complete. Each participant may only take part in one interview and one think-aloud procedure.
Treatment:
Other: Online Chronic Pain Management Intervention for Teenagers
Parents of teenagers with chronic pain
Description:
Semi-structured interviews followed by 'think-aloud' procedure in part two. Semi-structured interviews may last up to 1 hour and are audio-recorded. A pre-piloted interview schedule has been developed and will guide the conversation. 'Think-aloud' procedure involves showing participants some of the online content that has been developed on a computer screen, and asking them to say aloud their commentary on any aspects. Participants will be audio-recorded during the task, and it is not anticipated the task will take longer than 1 hour to complete. Each participant may only take part in one interview and one think-aloud procedure.
Treatment:
Other: Online Chronic Pain Management Intervention for Teenagers

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Christina Liossi, DPsych; Anna L Hurley-Wallace, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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