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Feasibility and Reliability of the Melbourne Assessment-2 (MA-2) for Telehealth

The Ohio State University logo

The Ohio State University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Cerebral Palsy
Hemiplegic Cerebral Palsy

Treatments

Other: Assessment only, no intervention

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06810063
2023B0100

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goals of this study:

  1. Determine if a play based test of arm and hand movements is valid and reliable when conducted through telehealth for children with hemiplegic cerebral palsy.
  2. Measure differences in parent, provider and child engagement when an assessment is conducted in-person compared to via telehealth.
  3. Rate caregivers' overall impressions of procedures when an assessment is conducted in-person compared to telehealth.

Participants will attend two visits, one in person and one through telehealth. During each visit, the child will play with common toys. The sessions will be video recorded and scored using two standardized assessments, the Melbourne Assessment-2 (MA-2) and the Assisting Hand Assessment.

Full description

After a child has a stroke, noticeable and lifelong developmental concerns emerge. One side of the body is typically much weaker, often impacting the arm/hand more than the leg/foot, so we focus on the arm/hand. The weakness is like adults with stroke, but in children, stroke impairs play, reaching for/holding toys, communication gestures, and whole-body movement. Because of this, most children with pediatric stroke will receive physical and/or occupational therapy throughout childhood. Traditionally, rehabilitation occurs with the child, caregiver and therapist meeting in person at clinics, homes, or schools. However, telehealth rehabilitation, where the therapist and patient meet virtually through a computer or tablet, has emerged a sustainable and accessible alternative. Telehealth also has the potential to improve access to quality treatments, improve health outcomes and reduce healthcare costs. One problem with telehealth rehabilitation is that few assessments have been validated for use in telehealth. In adults with stroke, researchers have identified several assessments for that work well via telehealth. Similarly, in children with one specific brain disease, researchers found that the results of one commonly used gross motor test are similar when delivered via telehealth compared to in-person. Unfortunately, there is no studied arm/hand assessment for children with stroke. This makes it hard to measure if telehealth rehabilitation changes arm/hand function. This proposal will test two playful arm/hand assessments via telehealth. Investigators will test 35 children (2-10 years old) twice (once in-person and once via telehealth) with the same assessment and compare the results. Investigators will use two well-established assessments, the Melbourne Assessment-2 and the Assisting Hand Assessment. Both assessments will be recorded- via camera (in-person) and secure videoconferencing (telehealth). Those recordings will then be scored by a therapist trained in the Melbourne Assessment and Assisting Hand Assessment. Investigators will compare the results of both assessments to see if the scores match.

Enrollment

35 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 10 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ages 2-10 years old
  • hemiplegic cerebral palsy
  • able to attend an in-person visit in the research lab OR live within 60 miles of the research lab
  • able to attend a telehealth session with personal device

Exclusion criteria

  • child or caregiver does not speak English
  • unable to attend one in person visit and one telehealth visit within 1 month

Trial design

35 participants in 1 patient group

In-person vs. telehealth assessment
Description:
Participants will be randomly assigned to in-person visit first or telehealth visit first. Both groups will complete both visits. Each visit requires about 20 minutes.
Treatment:
Other: Assessment only, no intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Elizabeth Maus, DPT; Petra Sternberg, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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