Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04470180

Virtual Teach to Goal vs. Brief Intervention Inhaler Study-outpatient

An RCT of Virtual Teach-to-Goal Versus Brief Instruction for Children With Asthma in Clinics

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Chicago · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study aims to evaluate the comparative effectiveness of a high-fidelity, low-resource, and feasible model versus a standardized brief intervention that mimics usual care to deliver tailored inhaler technique education to children with asthma via a randomized clinical trial. We have already conducted a trial of V-TTG among elementary school-aged children hospitalized in the inpatient setting and we now aim to test this tool in the outpatient clinic setting among a broader pediatric patient population.

Detailed description

Asthma is the most common chronic childhood condition and has significant adverse consequences. One in 12 United States children has asthma, resulting in 13.4 million missed school days, 1 million emergency department visits, and 140,000 hospitalizations annually. Urban, minority, and underserved youth are disproportionally affected. On Chicago's South Side, one-in-five children have an asthma diagnosis; over half visit an urgent care or emergency department (55%), miss school (51.2%), or require parents to miss work annually due to asthma (56.1%). Effective self-management is crucial to optimize asthma care and improve outcomes. A key barrier to self-management is the improper use of respiratory inhalers, which limits disease control. Better inhaler technique is associated with improved asthma outcomes for children. Assessment and education of inhaler technique are recommended at all healthcare encounters; however, it is limited in practice because it is resource-intensive (both personnel and time) and lacks fidelity. Thus, low-resource interventions that accurately teach inhaler skills are needed to impact pediatric asthma outcomes. Teach-to-Goal (TTG) is a patient-centered strategy that uses tailored rounds of teaching and assessments to ensure mastery of inhaler technique. Studies show it is effective but resource-intensive. A "virtual TTG" (V-TTG) intervention represents an opportunity to deliver inhaler technique education with a high-fidelity, low-resource, and feasible strategy. The module utilizes innovative learning technology with video demonstrations and assessment questions to tailor education to each user; the cycles of assessment and education continues until satisfactory mastery is achieved. Our team developed a V-TTG intervention for adults with demonstrated efficacy. It remains unknown whether this interactive and adaptive module will be feasible and effective in the pediatric population due to varied developmental levels and parental involvement in care. Virtual Teach-to-Goal (V-TTG) holds the potential to improve inhaler technique in children; however, because learning theory indicates children and adults learn differently, the same learning module cannot be utilized. We have already constructed V-TTG for children with feedback from children with asthma, parents, and healthcare professionals. The learning module is tailored for age by using developmentally and age-appropriate vocabulary, concepts, format, and pacing.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALVirtual Teach to GoalParticipants will complete inhaler education on a tablet device.
BEHAVIORALBrief InstructionParticipants will be read out loud instruction on how to use their inhaler.

Timeline

Start date
2020-08-01
Primary completion
2021-11-05
Completion
2021-11-05
First posted
2020-07-14
Last updated
2022-02-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04470180. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.