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Remote Delivery of a Visuospatial Intervention to Reduce Traumatic Intrusive Memories After Paediatric Intensive Care

Q

Queen's University Belfast

Status

Completed

Conditions

Intrusion Symptom

Treatments

Other: Simple cognitive task intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05500105
EPS 22_57

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a brief intervention, involving a imagery-competing task, remotely delivered to parents who are currently experiencing persistent intrusive traumatic memories at least one month following their child's discharge from intensive care.

Full description

This is a feasibility study of a brief intervention, involving a visuospatial intervention (i.e. an imagery-competing task), remotely delivered to parents who are currently experiencing persistent intrusive traumatic memories at least one month following their child's discharge from the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) or neonatal intensive care (NICU).

This study seeks to examine the feasibility and acceptability of delivering this brief intervention remotely with parents currently experiencing persistent intrusive traumatic memories at least one month following their child's discharge from PICU or NICU. The study aims to estimate recruitment, retention, outcome completion and adherence rates, assess acceptability, and in addition to explore the preliminary effect of the intervention on primary and secondary outcomes. Specifically, this study seeks to answer the following questions:

  1. How willing are parents, who are currently experiencing persistent intrusive traumatic memories, at least one month following their child's discharge from PICU or NICU, to take part in this brief intervention delivered remotely?
  2. How willing are parents to remain in the study until completion at follow up?
  3. How willing are participants to complete all outcome measures?
  4. How acceptable is this intervention to parents when delivered remotely?
  5. Having taken part in the study, how willing are these parents to give consent for their child to take part in this intervention?
  6. Having completed the intervention, how willing are parents to be part of a randomised control group?
  7. Does this intervention help reduce the number of intrusive memories participants experience, as well as symptoms of anxiety, depression and PTS from baseline to follow-up?

Please note: After approximately six months into recruitment the enrolment target of 20 participants had not been achieved, only 12 participants had consented to take part in the study by this time. After reflecting on the recruitment process it was decided to include parents whose child had either been admitted to paediatric intensive care (PICU) or neonatal intensive care (NICU). The rationale for this was that research evidence demonstrates that admission to either a NICU or a PICU is similarly stressful for parents (Seideman et al., 1997) and many commonalities exist between them, "most notably the similarity of parent and staff experiences and the coexisting medical, psychological and developmental needs of babies and children" (Atkins & Syed-Sabir, 2022, p.9). Parents who have had a child in intensive care can experience intrusive memories whether that be paediatric or neonatal intensive care. Therefore, in light of this, it seemed worthwhile to see if explicitly seeking to recruit parents whose child had been admitted to PICU or NICU would improve participant enrolment. On 10th March 2023, after receiving approval from the research ethics committee, the study documents were amended (e.g., advert, participant information sheet etc.) to explicitly extend to parents who have had a child in intensive care to include parents whose child has been in either PICU or NICU.

Enrollment

17 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Parent of a child who was discharged from PICU or NICU at least one month prior to study recruitment.
  2. Parent who is currently experiencing persistent intrusive memories (at least a minimum of three intrusive memories in the past week).
  3. Parent who has access to, and sufficient ability to use an electronic device (smartphone/tablet and/or computer/laptop) for remote delivery.
  4. Adult aged 18 or older
  5. Live in the UK or Ireland

Exclusion criteria

  1. Parent of a child who was discharged from PICU or NICU less than one month prior to study recruitment.
  2. Parent who experienced less than three intrusive memories in the past week
  3. Parent who does not have access to, and ability to, use an electronic device e.g., computer or smartphone.
  4. Younger than 18 years old
  5. Does not live in the UK or Ireland

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

17 participants in 1 patient group

Simple cognitive task intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Session 1: A memory cue followed by playing the computer game "Tetris" (e.g. on own smartphone) with mental rotation instructions. Options to engage in self-administered/guided booster sessions per intrusive memory.
Treatment:
Other: Simple cognitive task intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

David McCormack; Sinead Farquharson

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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