Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03126851

Promoting Safe Use of Children's Cough/Cold Medicines

Identifying "Best Practices" for the Safe Use of Pediatric Cough and Cold Medications

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
312 (actual)
Sponsor
NYU Langone Health · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study seeks to identify ways to help parents safely use cough/cold medications with their children. The study focuses on 3 key tasks that have been found to be difficult for parents: 1) decision-making about whether medicines should be given based on a child's age, 2) use of active ingredient information to determine which medications are safe to give together, and 3) medication dosing. Specific ways that labels and dosing tools can be changed to improve parent understanding and ability to use pediatric cough and cold medications will be tested. This includes looking at whether including age restriction information on the front panel helps parents make better decisions about whether a medication should be given to a child, as well as whether presence of a specific warning or pictogram can help improve this understanding. In addition, the role of font size, including a box around ingredients, and use of a specific warning to look at and compare active ingredients, will be examined to see if these can help parents decide if two medications can be given together safely. Finally, dosing charts with pictograms of dosing tools, and provision of certain dosing tools, can lead to fewer parent dosing errors. A label/dosing tool combination that incorporates what is learned from the first part of the study will be developed based on findings from the first part of the study, and then tested to see whether this improves parent understanding and use of pediatric cough and cold medicines. Hypotheses include: 1) changes in labels and dosing tools, such as including explicit warnings, and pictographic warnings/instructions can improve parent understanding and ability to act on of medication instructions, 2) parents with low health literacy and/or LEP will especially benefit from strategies such as explicit wording, warnings, and pictogram, and 3) parents receiving the comprehensive labeling and dosing strategy will have a better understanding of appropriate use of cough/cold medications, including fewer dosing errors, compared to standard labels. A multi-part experiment will be conducted. Findings will be merged with known evidence around health literacy best practices to develop a comprehensive, consumer-centered strategy for English and Spanish-speaking parents. Pilot testing of the comprehensive strategy in comparison to existing labels will then take place.

Detailed description

See Brief summary.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERLabelLabels vary based on presence or absence of age range information, and inclusion of an explicit warning in words, with or without a pictographic icon.

Timeline

Start date
2017-05-01
Primary completion
2018-08-10
Completion
2018-08-10
First posted
2017-04-24
Last updated
2023-07-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03126851. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.