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UnknownNCT01680276

Clinical and Cost Effectiveness of Positive Behaviour Support: a Trial

Clinical and Cost Effectiveness of Staff Training in Positive Behaviour Support (PBS) for Treating Challenging Behaviour in People With Intellectual Disability: A Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
246 (actual)
Sponsor
University College, London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Many people with intellectual disability have challenging behaviour which often has serious consequences such as the prescription of long term medication, in-patient admissions and disruption of normal daily activities. Community intellectual disability services may have difficulties in helping people with challenging behavior. Available research suggests that Positive Behavior Support (PBS), a training system that teaches staff how to manage these situations, can benefit service users who may show improvements in challenging behavior and quality of life. The investigators do not know of any study so far that has examined the clinical and cost effectiveness of PBS that is provided by staff in routine clinical practice in community intellectual disability services. If PBS proved to be better than treatment as usual, it would have important implications for the management of a very vulnerable group of service users. In this trial, health staff will receive accredited training in PBS available in a manual written by PBS experts. It will give details of how to understand challenging behavior and develop a management plan and how to implement it and monitor whether it has achieved its goals. Twenty community intellectual disability services and 260 service users with mild to severe intellectual disability and challenging behavior will be invited to take part in the study. The sample size calculations are based on our pilot study and allow for non participation of 10% and inflation due to the number of community intellectual disability teams and staff that will take part. The teams will be randomly allocated into one of two conditions. Half will be in the PBS arm (but will also have treatment as usual) and half will be in the treatment as usual only group. The investigators will carry out assessments of challenging behavior, use of services, quality of life, mental health, aggression and family and paid carer burden at six and 12 months. The investigators will monitor treatment fidelity and the investigators will talk to a sample of paid and family carers, service users, staff and managers about what they think of the treatment and how best the investigators can deliver it in routine care. The main outcome is reduction in challenging behavior at one year after the randomization. The investigators will also carry out a health economic evaluation to examine the costs and consequences of staff training in PBS.

Detailed description

Please see published protocol at: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/14/219

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPBS based staff trainingPlease see published study protocol for more information: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/14/219
OTHERTreatment as Usualhttp://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-244X/14/219

Timeline

Start date
2012-11-01
Primary completion
2015-11-01
Completion
2016-11-01
First posted
2012-09-07
Last updated
2016-05-23

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01680276. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Clinical and Cost Effectiveness of Positive Behaviour Support: a Trial (NCT01680276) · Clinical Trials Directory