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UnknownNCT03684382

Narrative E-Writing Intervention (NeW-I) for Parents of Children With Chronic Life-Threatening Illness

Development and Evaluation of a Narrative E-Writing Intervention (NeW-I) for Parents of Children With Chronic Life-Threatening Illness

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
66 (estimated)
Sponsor
Nanyang Technological University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Narrative e-Writing Intervention (NeW-I) is an evidence-based, strength-focused and meaning-oriented approach that aims at enhancing well-being, alleviating burden, and reducing adverse grief outcomes among Singaporean parents caring for a child with chronic life-threatening illness. In collaboration with KK Women's and Children's Hospital and Club Rainbow Singapore, a pilot randomized controlled trial with a built-in qualitative evaluation and feasibility study will be carried out to assess the efficacy of the therapist-facilitated NeW-I protocol and platform among a purposive sample of 66 participants. The findings generated will form the foundation for a full-scale RCT for advancing paediatric palliative care and parental bereavement support.

Detailed description

Background: Conventional grief support interventions for parents whose children are suffering from a chronic life-threatening illness often begin only after the child's death. Despite robust evidence which shows that pre-loss interventions that enhance death preparedness can alleviate psychological distress and prevent adverse grief outcomes among family caregivers of dying patients, there is no known program designed specifically to address the psycho-emotional-spiritual needs of parents facing child loss. And while the National Strategy for Palliative Care in Singapore aims to promote holistic end-of- life care services to patients and their caregivers, vast inadequacy continues to exist in the support provided to parents caring for a dying child in the local context. Objective and Methods: A novel therapist-facilitated, online intervention is conceived to fill this critical service gap. Adopting an evidence-based approach, the research team has developed a strength-focused and meaning-oriented Narrative e-Writing Intervention (NeW-I) for parents anticipating the death of their child due to a chronic life-threatening condition. The design of NeW-I is informed by an existing body of research (i.e. international systematic review and local qualitative inquiry) that critically examines the lived experience of bereaved parents of children with life- limiting illnesses. NeW-I will be implemented in Singapore in collaboration with KK Women and Child's Hospital and Club Rainbow Singapore. A pilot Randomized Control Trial (RCT) with a built-in accessibility and feasibility study will examine the efficacy of the NeW-I therapeutic protocol for enhancing quality of life, spiritual wellbeing, hope and perceived social support, as well as reducing depressive symptoms, caregiver burden and anticipatory grief among a purposive sample of 66 participants. Significance: NeW-I aspires to enhance quality of life, spiritual well-being, hope and sense of social support, as well as alleviating depressive symptoms, caregiving burden, and adverse grief outcomes among Singaporean parents facing the terminal illness and eventual death of their sick child. The findings generated will form the foundation of a full-scale RCT for advancing holistic paediatric palliative care and parental bereavement support locally and around the world.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERNeW-I groupA 5-week intervention offered to parents of children with chronic life-threatening illness using an internet-based narrative approach with life review elements. After completion of the first four weeks of the intervention, participants will receive a 'legacy' document which is a compiled and edited document of their narrative expression during the first four weeks. This legacy document is structured in a manner that enables participants to find a sense of spiritual well-being and hope in their experience of caring for their child through examination of past experiences and achievements as well as future aspirations.

Timeline

Start date
2019-02-01
Primary completion
2020-07-01
Completion
2020-10-01
First posted
2018-09-25
Last updated
2019-02-18

Locations

4 sites across 1 country: Singapore

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03684382. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.