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RecruitingNCT06136260

The Grief Navigation Trial: A Comparison of Two Interventions to Support Parents After Their Child's Unexpected or Traumatic Death

The Grief Navigation Trial: A Multi-Site Pragmatic Comparative Effectiveness Trial of Interventions to Support Parents After Their Child's Unexpected or Traumatic Death

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
2,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
Ann & Robert H Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Parents of children who die traumatically or unexpectedly from things like suicide or an overdose suffer from mental and physical health problems and can experience massive disruptions in their family life. For about half of these parents, the first, and sometimes only, interactions they have with the healthcare system when their child dies are with a medical examiner or coroner (hereafter 'ME'). But MEs have little to no training in helping grieving families, and there are no standards guiding medical examiners or coroners on how or even if they should help grieving families. This gap leaves parents to find the help they need on their own. This research will test two different strategies for addressing this gap in the healthcare system.

Detailed description

Of approximately 60,000 annual deaths of people \< 25 years old, \~45% occur unexpectedly or traumatically (e.g., from homicide, suicide, or unintentional injury) and become a medical examiner or coroner (hereafter 'ME') case. Parents and caregivers (hereafter 'parents') of these children suffer debilitating mental health issues like complicated grief and depression, physical problems and family dysfunction, and struggle to find support. Often, the ME is parents' sole point of contact with the healthcare system. Yet MEs have limited education, guidance, and tools to support bereaved parents. Scalable systems-level interventions are needed, at the point of ME care, to connect bereaved parents to critical supports. This study will compare two interventions to facilitate care across healthcare settings for bereaved parents: 1. CommunityRx-Bereavement (CRx-B), an evidence- and theory-based, low intensity, highly scalable intervention, and 2. General bereavement support information (GBSI), a standardized treatment regimen developed from extant literature and current recommended standards for supporting parents after a child's death. This is a pragmatic, multi-site 1:1 randomized controlled comparative effectiveness study using a type I hybrid design. CRx-B and GBSI will be carried out by Missing Pieces, a community-based organization. To learn about which strategy works better, the study team will ask parents to complete surveys \~6.5 months after their child dies.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCommunityRx-BereavementThe medical examiner or coroner will refer parents to an organization called Missing Pieces. Missing Pieces does not deliver healthcare services to grieving families; rather, Missing Pieces helps families find grief services in their community. For CRx-B, a Grief Navigator from Missing Pieces will text and/or call the parent after receiving the referral; share information about grief and support resources; learn what resources the parent needs for themselves and their family; send the parent a personalized list of grief and social support community resources called a HealtheRx via text, email, or mail; and plan future text message communications with bidirectional functionality and, if requested, subsequent calls or texts from the Grief Navigator to occur at least 3, 6, and 12 months after the child's death.
OTHERGeneral Bereavement Support InformationThe medical examiner or coroner will refer parents to an organization called Missing Pieces. Missing Pieces does not deliver healthcare services to grieving families; rather, Missing Pieces helps families find grief services in their community. For GBSI, Missing Pieces sends parents a unidirectional text message providing a link to a webpage with a general list of grief resources (e.g., support groups) and information about grief and bereavement within two weeks of the child's death and again 3, 6, and 12 months after the child's death.

Timeline

Start date
2024-03-04
Primary completion
2027-07-01
Completion
2028-02-01
First posted
2023-11-18
Last updated
2025-05-01

Locations

7 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06136260. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.