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The investigators hypothesize that use of an educational story with pictures illustrating overnight sleep study procedure (also called polysomnography or PSG)accompanied by simple narrative will be a cost-effective, readily accepted intervention that will contribute to successful completion of sleep studies among children with disabilities. Children who have been referred for a clinical sleep study at Kennedy Krieger Institute (KKI) will be enrolled and randomized to either recieve usual care (discussion of polysomnography with referring clinicians) or educational story intervention. Both groups of participants will be asked to complete questionnaries before and after the sleep study. Set-up for the sleep study will be videotaped so that behavior of the child can be evaluated. The investigators will evaluate whether successful study completion differs between the two groups.
Full description
This pilot study is a prospective clinical trial comparing parent knowledge of, and child outcomes for clinically indicated PSG which is part of routine care. Comparisons will take place before and after either educational intervention or usual clinical care preparing children for PSG at KKI. Interested families will be recruited through the Kennedy Krieger Institute (KKI) Sleep Disorders Clinic and flyers will be distributed to other KKI subspecialty clinics in which clinically indicated PSG may be ordered. Families for whose children PSG is clinically recommended in KKI Sleep Disorders Clinic will have informed consent obtained from parents and assent from children in clinic, and randomization will occur at that time. Alternately, families for whose children PSG is clinically recommended in that clinic or others may contact the research coordinator for phone screening (telephone script attached) in order to be consented and assented; randomization will then take place once informed consent is received. Families randomized to the educational story intervention group will receive a printed copy of the educational story, as well as instructions on how to use it. Families randomized to the standard clinical care group will receive a set of pictures used in standard clinical care without an accompanying educational story.
The educational story has been developed by the Primary Investigator, who is board certified in Pediatrics and Sleep Medicine, and the Co-Investigator, who has extensive training in child clinical and pediatric psychology. It has also been reviewed by professionals at the KKI Center for Autism and Related Disorders with experience in developing educational materials for children with disabilities. There is a single version of this story that parents will be given to take home and review with their child. It is a short, upbeat narrative about a boy who comes to the investigators pediatric sleep laboratory for his first PSG. It is illustrated with color photographs depicting the entire PSG process (arrival at the laboratory, each step of PSG setup, the final appearance of the child with monitoring applied, the child asleep, and departure the following morning after a successful PSG). The text has a Flesch-Kincaid grade level of 2.5, and Flesch reading ease of 89.4.
Research procedures prior to PSG include completion of the following questionnaires:
These questionnaires will be done 2-3 weeks prior to the night of the PSG.
All families will receive a phone call one week prior to PSG reminding them of their upcoming procedure, and for families in the intervention group, reminding them to review the social story. Parents in the intervention group will be asked to review the story at least 3 times with their child.
Research procedures for parents on arrival the night of the clinically indicated PSG include the following:
Because Dr. Paasch and Dr. Accardo are blinded to the randomization of study subjects, they will be able to score pre-PSG questionnaires and enter data as needed throughout the study.
Research procedures to be completed by sleep technicians the night of the study are the following:
Research procedures for parents prior to discharge from the laboratory will consist of a post-PSG qualitative questionnaire (prior to discharge from the laboratory) regarding their experience in the laboratory. In the case of the intervention group, they will also be asked how the educational story was helpful and whether parents recommended changes to make it more helpful in future.
After completion of the PSG and completion of questionnaires, the study is complete. Therefore the average length of time over which the study takes place, is approximately 3-4 weeks.
Following completion of the clinically indicated PSG performed for clinical care purposes, several steps will occur:
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26 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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