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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07501247

Trial of a Nurse-Led Firearm Safety Intervention in the Pediatric Inpatient Setting

Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Trial of a Nurse-Led Firearm Safety Intervention in the Pediatric Inpatient Setting

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
7,200 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Pennsylvania · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In this randomized controlled trial, researchers will assess the effectiveness and implementation of S.A.F.E. Firearm in the inpatient pediatric hospital setting. S.A.F.E. Firearm has been adapted for nurse-led delivery to parents/caregivers (hereafter, parents) of hospitalized youth. Adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm involves a brief discussion between nurses and parents about secure firearm storage and an offer of a free firearm cable lock. Researchers will test S.A.F.E. Firearm and a bundle of strategies intended to support the routinization of S.A.F.E. Firearm into nursing workflows. The questions the study aims to answer are: * How effective is adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm at changing parents' firearm storage behavior? * How effective is the implementation strategy bundle at increasing delivery of adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm? Some parents will be invited to participate in surveys about their experiences with adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm, and some nurses will be invited to participate in interviews about their experiences with the implementation strategy bundle.

Detailed description

The proposed study aims to reduce firearm-related deaths in children by scaling out an evidence-based secure firearm storage program. S.A.F.E. Firearm is an evidence-based program that includes (1) brief, parent-directed discussion on secure firearm storage using a harm reduction approach and (2) free cable locks offers to all parents during well child visits in pediatric primary care. Importantly, S.A.F.E. Firearm has potential to save lives beyond primary care, and pediatric inpatient settings are an advantageous context for S.A.F.E. Firearm implementation. Across the U.S. there are over 250 children's hospitals, approximately two million children are hospitalized yearly, and parental engagement is a core feature of care. Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) is a large, nonprofit pediatric health care system with two freestanding children's hospitals in the greater Philadelphia region. As part of Aim 1 of this project, the research team is adapting S.A.F.E. Firearm for the pediatric inpatient setting and nurse-led delivery, plus developing a bundle of implementation strategies. The research team anticipates including an electronic health record-based reminder, education, and champions as part of the bundle. In the present study, the research team will conduct a pragmatic parallel cluster randomized hybrid type II effectiveness-implementation trial across two CHOP hospitals. Inpatient nursing unit clusters will be randomized to receive adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm or usual care, defined as routine clinical care plus free cable locks available in the hospital safety center. Implementation outcomes will be examined through mixed methods. Aims for the study include: Aim 2. Conduct a pragmatic parallel cluster randomized hybrid type II effectiveness-implementation trial with inpatient nursing units at CHOP to test whether parents exposed to adapted S.A.F.E. Firearm report greater improvements in secure storage (primary outcome) compared to parents exposed to usual care over one year of active implementation. Secondary outcomes are additional firearm safety behaviors (e.g., firearm removal). Aim 3. Examine the effect of the implementation strategy bundle on S.A.F.E. Firearm implementation outcomes. The research team will evaluate the proximal impacts of the implementation strategy bundle. The primary implementation outcome is reach (i.e., electronic health record-documented program delivery). Secondary outcomes include fidelity, acceptability, and maintenance. The research team will also explore implementation strategy processes and mechanisms via qualitative interviews with nurses.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALAdapted S.A.F.E. FirearmS.A.F.E. Firearm is an evidence-based program that includes (1) brief, parent-directed discussion on secure firearm storage using a harm reduction approach and (2) free cable locks offers to all parents
BEHAVIORALImplementation bundleElectronic health record-based reminder, education, champions

Timeline

Start date
2026-12-01
Primary completion
2027-12-01
Completion
2028-05-01
First posted
2026-03-30
Last updated
2026-04-13

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07501247. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.