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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05137223

BREATHE-Peds Pilot - I Focus Group Interviews

The Development and Pilot Testing of a Caregiver-Child Shared Decision-Making Intervention to Improve Asthma in Urban Youth

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
45 (actual)
Sponsor
Columbia University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The overall aims of this study are to develop and pilot test BRief intervention to Evaluate Asthma THErapy (BREATHE)-Peds, a dyadic shared decision-making intervention, to improve asthma by supporting self-management among racial and ethnic minority early adolescents receiving care for uncontrolled asthma in federally-qualified health centers (FQHCs) in urban communities. Aim 1 (Phase I) involves developing the intervention through focus groups with early adolescents and caregivers. Aims 2 and 3 (Phase II) involve preliminary testing of the intervention through a pilot randomized controlled trial. This record is for Phase I only.

Detailed description

Despite high asthma prevalence and morbidity among adolescents (highest among Black and Hispanic youth and early adolescents aged 10-14), there is a lack of developmentally appropriate interventions for this at-risk group. Racial and ethnic minority early adolescents have sub-optimal asthma self-management. Critical health behaviors that emerge during early adolescence affect lifelong patterns; therefore, early adolescence offers a unique opportunity to intervene. Additionally, successful self-management requires the right division of responsibility between adolescents and their caregivers. Thus, intervening simultaneously with early adolescents and their caregivers who can help support the adolescent's growing autonomy to self-manage their condition has the potential for a synergistic effect. Prior studies have demonstrated the effects of improved asthma control of BREATHE, a brief one-time shared decision-making intervention for Black adults with uncontrolled asthma that utilizes motivational interviewing delivered by primary care providers. This study (i.e., Phase I) attempts to build on these promising results by adapting BREATHE to caregiver-early adolescent dyads. Phase I of the study will involve conducting up to 6 focus groups to identify components of BREATHE that are relevant to racial and ethnic minority early adolescents with uncontrolled asthma receiving care at FQHCs in urban communities and their caregivers. Focus groups will be composed of \~10 participants each: (a) two groups of early adolescents aged 10-14 with asthma; (b) two groups of the caregivers of the youth in Group A; and (c) two groups of adolescent-caregiver dyads who did not participate in Group A or B. Investigators will use the focus group results to write BREATHE-Peds, making modifications based on feedback from two primary care providers and two pediatric pulmonologists.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2022-04-26
Primary completion
2022-09-19
Completion
2022-09-19
First posted
2021-11-30
Last updated
2024-11-06

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05137223. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.