The overall aim of this study is to evaluate the effects and the implementation process of the Family Talk Intervention (FTI) in clinical practice when a child or a parent of dependent children has a life-threatening/life-limiting illness (cancer, neurological diseases, etc.). During 2021, FTI will be implemented in several different care contexts including a children's hospital and a university hospital in Sweden. Social workers will be educated in using the FTI in their clinical work. This study has a pre-post effectiveness-implementation hybrid design using mixed method. Data collection will be made using web-based questionnaires and interviews with families and social workers, and observations will be performed throughout the study.
The Family Talk Intervention (FTI), also called Beardslee's Family Intervention is a manual-based complex intervention and involves families who have children aged 6-18 years. The core elements are to support the families in talking about illness-related subjects, support the parents in understanding the needs of their children and how to support them, and support the families in identifying their strengths and how best to use them. The overall aim of this trial is to evaluate the effects and the implementation process of FTI in clinical practice when a parent or a child has a life-threatening/life-limiting illness (cancer, neurological diseases, etc.). More specifically, to examine the effects of FTI regarding family communication and psychosocial health among family members (Aim 1) and describe facilitating factors and barriers for implementing FTI in everyday clinical practice (Aim 2). The FTI has previously been pilot-tested in the context of specialized palliative home care with promising results. In pilot-tests, an assigned interventionist was used for intervention delivery, while in this continued trial, social workers will deliver the intervention as a part of their clinical work. This trial has a pre-post effectiveness-implementation hybrid design using mixed method. It will be placed at a children's hospital and at a university hospital in Sweden and conducted by all social workers working there (n=25). Education of social workers in working with FTI will take place during 2021 and families will be invited to the project from April 2022 and until power has been reached. Data will be collected using web-based questionnaires and interviews with families and social workers, and observations will be performed throughout the study.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
A psychosocial family-based intervention that is designed to give support to an entire family when a child has life-threatening illness.
Marie Cederschiöld University College
Stockholm, Sweden
RECRUITINGChanged family communication from Family Adaptability and Cohesion Scale IV (FACES IV)
Measures family communication
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed resilience for adults measured by the Resilience Scale (RS-14)
Measures psychosocial health for parents/guardians and for children aged 13 years and older
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed resilience in children measured by the Resilience Scale for Children (RS-10),
Measures psychosocial health for children aged 8-12 years
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed symptoms of pathologic grief measured by Prolonged Grief Disorder (PG-12)
Measures pre-death grief
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD)
Measures anxiety in adults
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed feelings of strength and weaknesses in children measured by The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)
Measures self-perceived strength and weakness. Parent Proxy for children under 11 years.
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed feelings of parental skill measured by the Parental Skill Questionnaire (SDQ)
Measures self-perceived parental skill
Time frame: At baseline (before FTI starts), after the end of FTI/three months later (follow-up 1), and six months after that (follow-up 2).
Changed key mechanisms to promote and inhibit implementation measured by The Swedish Normalization Process Theory Measure (S-NoMAD)
Characterizes and explains key mechanisms that promote and inhibit the implementation, embedding and integration of new health techniques, technologies and other complex interventions.
Time frame: At baseline (after FTI education), four months later (follow-up 1) and 12 months later (follow-up 2).
Changed organizational context measured by Alberta Context Tool (ACT)
Measures organizational context for use in complex healthcare settings.
Time frame: At baseline (after FTI education), four months later (follow-up 1) and 12 months later (follow-up 2).
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