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Peer Mentoring to Improve Self-management in Youth With IBD

K

Kelly Boone

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Pediatric Crohns Disease
Pediatric Ulcerative Colitis
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Treatments

Behavioral: Fun group activities
Behavioral: Mentor
Behavioral: IBD educational website
Behavioral: Parent support group
Behavioral: Monthly check-in calls from program coordinator
Behavioral: Group educational activities

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03827109
R01NR017533

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study is a multi-site randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the efficacy of a peer mentoring program for improving the self-management of youth with IBD. The primary outcomes are youth QOL and functioning in typical life activities. Secondary outcomes are disease outcomes, including disease severity and clinical outcomes (hospital admissions, clinic appointments, missed appointments, procedures). Mentor and parent QOL will also be assessed as secondary outcomes. Mechanisms that may contribute to the effects of the Mentoring Program will be investigated: Parent and child self-efficacy, illness uncertainty, coping, social support and child perceived stigma. Sex will be explored as a moderator.

A total of 200 youth and their parents and 100 mentors will be enrolled. Eligibility criteria for youth include age 10-17 years, parent and child English fluency, and no documented neurodevelopmental disorder or history of hospitalization for a psychiatric or behavioral disorder. Mentors will be ≥16 years, ≥1 year post-diagnosis of IBD and managing their IBD well. They will be rigorously screened via online application, interview, checks of references, driving records, and social media, background check, and successful completion of a 3-hour training. Youth will be randomly assigned to the Mentoring Program or an "Educational Activity" comparison group, with baseline assessments occurring prior to randomization. Follow-up assessments will occur post-intervention and 6 months later.

The Mentoring Program consists of year-long, 1:1 mentee-mentor relationships with group educational activities, online educational information, and a parent support component. Mentors and mentees are expected to have weekly contact (e.g., text, phone), with in-person contact 1 - 2 times per month.

Group activities target self-management skills through experiential opportunities, modeling, and direct instruction. Educational topics include nutrition, stress, IBD and school, and disease management, and are taught by experts in each content area. They also provide opportunities to socialize with other mentors and mentees: lunch and games are provided before or after the educational event.

The Educational Activity comparison group consists of separate educational group events on the same topics (with no social time), educational information posted online, and monthly encouragement to engage in activities in the community.

Full description

The proposed study is a multi-site randomized controlled clinical trial evaluating the efficacy of a peer mentoring program for improving the self-management of youth with IBD. The primary outcomes are youth QOL and functioning in typical life activities, which can remain significantly impaired even when the disease is in remission, but have received little empirical attention. Secondary outcomes are disease outcomes, including disease severity and clinical outcomes (hospital admissions, clinic appointments, missed appointments, procedures). Mentor and parent QOL will also be assessed as secondary outcomes. Mechanisms that may contribute to the effects of the Mentoring Program will be investigated: Parent and child self-efficacy, illness uncertainty, coping, social support and child perceived stigma may mediate relationships between mentoring and outcomes. Sex will be explored as a moderator.

A total of 200 youth and their parents and 100 mentors will be enrolled in the study. Eligibility criteria for youth include age 10-17 years, parent and child English fluency, and no documented neurodevelopmental disorder or history of hospitalization for a psychiatric or behavioral disorder. Mentors will be ≥16 years, ≥1 year post-diagnosis of IBD and managing their IBD well. They will be rigorously screened via online application, interview, checks of references, driving records, and social media, background check, and successful completion of a 3-hour training. Youth will be randomly assigned to the Mentoring Program or an "Educational Activity" comparison group, with baseline assessments occurring prior to randomization. Follow-up assessments will occur post-intervention and 6 months later. Youth in the Educational Activity group will be yoked to those in Mentoring Program, and the timing of their follow-up assessments will correspond to their yoked peer.

The Mentoring Program was developed via focus groups, an NIH-funded pilot study, national mentoring resources, and the PI's 10 years of experience with Big Brothers Big Sisters. It consists of year-long, 1:1 mentee-mentor relationships with group educational activities, online educational information, and a parent support component. Matching mentors and mentees is based on gender (same), age, geographical proximity, ethnicity, and interests. Mentors and mentees are expected to have weekly contact (e.g., text, phone), as well as participate in an activity (in person or virtually) 1 - 2 times per month, one of which can be attending a group activity together. The investigators expect the relationship to last 1 year, which is associated with better outcomes than shorter relationships.

Group activities target self-management skills through experiential opportunities, modeling, and direct instruction. Educational topics include nutrition, stress, IBD and school, and disease management, and are taught by experts in each content area (e.g., dietitian, pediatric gastroenterologists). They also provide opportunities to socialize with other mentors and mentees: lunch and games are provided before or after the educational event. Parents in the Mentoring Program participate in a social/support group facilitated by an Investigator while mentees and mentors are socializing. Parents join the mentees and mentors for the educational topics.

The Educational Activity comparison group consists of separate educational group events on the same topics (with no social or support time), educational information posted online, and monthly encouragement to engage in activities in the community.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a modification was approved so that all study activities can be conducted virtually, e.g., the in-person mentor-mentee monthly activity can be conducted via Skype, and group activities are live streamed.

Enrollment

79 patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Mentees:

  • Diagnosis of IBD
  • Age 10 - 17 years
  • Parent and child English fluency
  • No documented neuro-developmental disorder or history of hospitalization for a psychiatric or behavioral disorder

Mentors:

  • ≥16 years
  • ≥1 year post-diagnosis of IBD
  • Managing their IBD well
  • Pass a screening that includes an online application, interview, 3 character references, checks of driving records and social media, background check, mentor training

Exclusion criteria

Mentees: No documented neuro-developmental disorder or history of hospitalization for a psychiatric or behavioral disorder

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

79 participants in 2 patient groups

Mentoring program
Experimental group
Description:
The Mentoring Program consists of year-long, 1:1 mentee-mentor relationships with group educational activities, online educational information, and a parent support component. Mentors and mentees are expected to have weekly contact (e.g., text, phone), with in-person contact 1 - 2 times per month. Group educational topics include nutrition, stress, IBD and school, and disease management, and are taught by experts in each content area. They also provide opportunities to socialize with other mentors and mentees: lunch and games are provided before or after the educational event. Parents participate in a social/support group facilitated by an Investigator while mentees and mentors are socializing. Parents join the mentees and mentors for the educational topics. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, these activities can be conducted virtually.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Monthly check-in calls from program coordinator
Behavioral: Group educational activities
Behavioral: Parent support group
Behavioral: IBD educational website
Behavioral: Mentor
Behavioral: Fun group activities
Educational activity program
Active Comparator group
Description:
The Educational Activity comparison group consists of separate educational group events on the same topics (with no social time), educational information posted online, and monthly encouragement to engage in activities in the community. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, participants are encouraged to interact socially in safe ways, e.g., outdoors or virtually.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Monthly check-in calls from program coordinator
Behavioral: Group educational activities
Behavioral: IBD educational website

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Laura Mackner, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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