Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
The purpose of this proposal is to implement a joint project with Georgia Southern University and the Effingham County Navigator Team to improve the quality of life of families with a child with a disability in southeast Georgia. The final outcome of this project will be a new curriculum, Living Well Together, which builds on a previous implementation of the Living Well with a Disability curriculum in Bulloch County.
Full description
First, parent facilitators will be recruited and matched with their peers. Parent facilitators will be members of the Effingham County Navigator Team with a child with a disability. The peer matching resembles the community lay health worker model. The community lay health worker model will reduce the amount of time needed to meet face to face with families. To begin adapting the facilitator training and curriculum, the program directors will work with representatives from the University of Montana Rural Institute on Disabilities to review and update training materials. A representative from the Rural Institute on Disabilities will deliver an online intensive facilitator training. The facilitator training is approximately 15 hours long. The training includes three major components: peer training, facilitator training, and Master "Train the Trainer" training. The project directors will work with the Effingham County Navigator Team to recruit parents. The Navigator Team will recruit five parents as parent facilitators. The parents will work together with the project directors to deliver the adapted curriculum to participating families. With bi-weekly meetings for 10 weeks between parent facilitators and family participants in the home or another desired location. The project directors have already participated in the facilitator training and will serve as mentors to newly trained facilitators. At the end of the online training session, the parent facilitators will be equipped to successfully implement the Living Well curriculum. The project directors will schedule a working meeting before and after the facilitator training to discuss curriculum changes with the Rural Institute on Disabilities representative. Changes in readability are anticipated since the target audience includes adolescents. Curriculum delivery methods will need tailoring to match a family-based approach including activities to be completed at the home at the family and individual levels for parents, siblings, and children. Both GSU faculty and the Navigator team will lead monthly summary meetings to review the adapted content. These meetings will take place at a convenient location in the community as determined by the Navigator team. Pre and post focus groups will take place before and after these monthly meetings at a convenient locale in the community.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria
Families of with a child (3-50) with any developmental disability
Exclusion Criteria
Family and child are unable to follow directions and participate in curriculum activities.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
39 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Gavin Colquitt, EdD; Ashley Walker, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal