The purpose of this study is to: Aim 1: Evaluate the feasibility \[consent and refusal rates, attrition rates, length, and number of completed therapy sessions\], and acceptability \[interviews with children and guardians, overall patient and guardian satisfaction\] during inpatient physical therapy (PT) and occupational therapy (OT) sessions. Hypothesis: Animal-assisted interaction (AAI) with Paro, a robotic baby harp seal, during pediatric inpatient PT/OT sessions will be feasible and acceptable. Aim 2: Assess preliminary efficacy of AAI during PT/OT sessions with Paro on behavior (anxiety and affect) and motivation to participate in rehabilitation in hospitalized children. Hypothesis: Children who use Paro will demonstrate less anxiety, more positive affect, and greater motivation to participate in therapy than those who do not use Paro. Aim 3: Test the stress, anxiety, and depression levels of parents/guardians of children who use Paro inpatient physical and occupational therapy sessions. Hypothesis: In addition, parents and guardians of children that use Paro will report less stress, anxiety, and depression compared to parents/guardians of children that do not use Paro.
Animal Assisted Interactions (AAIs) are interventions that intentionally incorporate animals as part of a therapeutic process to promote human health, learning, and well-being. In general, domestic and farm animals such as dogs, cats, birds, equines, guinea pigs, rabbits, llamas, sheep, goats, and pigs are predominantly featured in AAI programs. Animals can be observed, held, and petted, or more actively integrated into specific therapy activities such as brushing with different tools to encourage range of motion and fine motor coordination. AAIs also promote exercise through tandem walking with the animals. Recent literature indicates that AAI can improve reality orientation and attention span, eliminate the sense of isolation, reduce stress and anxiety, enhance communication, promote positive social interactions, and enhance overall quality of life. The use of AAI in hospitalized children has the potential to engage patients, family members, and healthcare staff in an innovative, holistic approach to recovery. While additional research is warranted to further explore the potential impact of AAI on a variety of clinically meaningful patient outcomes, the highly technical, fast-paced hospital environment and the immunocompromised health statuses of many acutely ill hospitalized patients greatly limit the exploration of AAI in inpatient settings. A new frontier in animal robotics opens a vast array of opportunities to implement AAI in hospitalized populations. Robot animals may be just as effective as live animals and may provide even more flexibility and tailoring to meet the needs of diverse situations that arise in the hospital. In addition, the infection control risk that live animals pose to hospitalized patients may be significantly lessened. For this study, the investigators plan to conduct a two-armed randomized controlled trial with repeated measures. Hospitalized pediatric patients will participate in semi-structured, prescriptive physical and occupational therapy sessions on the categories of: 1) speech; 2) balance and endurance; 3) memory; 4) self-esteem; 5) fine motor; 6) sensory stimulation. Intervention group subjects (n=30) will participate in 10-30 minute therapy sessions with Paro, a therapeutic robotic baby harp seal. Control group subjects (n=30) will participate in 10-30 minute therapy sessions without Paro.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
25
Device: PARO therapy seal PARO, a baby harp seal, is an advanced interactive, therapeutic medical robot developed by AIST, a leading Japanese industrial automation pioneer. It allows the documented benefits of animal therapy to be administered to patients in environments such as hospitals and extended care facilities where live animals present treatment or logistical difficulties.
Children's Hosptial and Medical Center
Omaha, Nebraska, United States
Pain: Wrong-Baker FACES pain rating scale
The scale shows a series of faces ranging from a happy face at 0 which represents "no hurt" to a crying face at 10 which represents "hurts worst." Based on the faces and descriptions, the patient chooses the face that best describes their level of pain.
Time frame: Change from before therapy session to immediately after therapy session is completed
Anxiety: Children's Anxiety Meter-State (CAM-S)
The CAM scale is drawn to resemble a thermometer with a bulb at the bottom and horizontal lines at intervals going up to the top. The child is instructed to indicate with a line how the child feels from from the bottom of the thermometer (not worried or nervous) to the top (very worried or nervous).
Time frame: Change from before therapy session to immediately after therapy session is completed.
Intervention Acceptability
Patient Satisfaction Measure: Investigator-developed Satisfaction Measure contains one item which asks the participants to rank their satisfaction with the intervention from 1-5 (not at all - very much)
Time frame: Within 1 week of study completion
Hospital Acquired Infections-Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections (CLABSI)
Rates of Central Line Associated Blood Stream Infections (CLABSI) will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired Infections-Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI)
Rates of Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infections (CAUTI) will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired Infections-Enteroviruses
Rates of Enteroviruses will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired Infections-Influenza
Rates Influenza will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired Infections-Multi-Drug Resistant Organisms
Rates of Multi-Drug Resistant Organisms will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired Infections-Surgical-Site Infections (SSI)
Surgical-Site Infections (SSI) will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Hospital Acquired InfectionsVentilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP)
Rates of Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia (VAP) will be collected from the electronic medical record.
Time frame: Chart review will be conducted from the first day the patient is enrolled until 1 week after study completion.
Sedation Exposure
Sedative and analgesic medications will be abstracted from the electronic medical record (EMR) in order to calculate sedation frequency for 4 hours after each PT/OT session in which PARO was used.
Time frame: 4 hours after each individual session
Microbial Contamination Screening
The ATP Monitoring with SystemSURE Plus Process uses a process which monitors levels of ATP Bioluminescence The investigators will implement established cleaning protocols and then measure ATP before the PT/OT session by swabbing PARO on the following areas: head, right flipper, left flipper, bottom \[by on/off switch\], top left back area, top right back area, stomach \[underneath\].
Time frame: Completed immediately after each individual session
Activity performance form
The Activity Performance Form is an investigator developed measure that assesses the length of each therapy session (in minutes), the time to the patient's first out of bed movement, as well as the number and types of range of motion exercises performed (Passive, Active assist, and Active)
Time frame: Immediately after each intervention therapy sesison
Physiologic variables-Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure (systolic \& diastolic)
Time frame: Change from before therapy session to immediately after therapy session is completed
Physiologic variables-Respiratory Rate
Respiratory Rate
Time frame: Change from before therapy session to immediately after therapy session is completed
Physiologic variables
Oxygen Saturation
Time frame: Change from before therapy session to immediately after therapy session is completed
Opinion on Pets
18-item instrument with seven-point Likert scale (1-strongly disagree to 7-strongly agreed) designed to measure the favorableness of attitudes toward pets. Minimum Score = 18; Maximum score = 126. The higher the score, the more favorable a patient feels towards pets.
Time frame: Prior to the start of the first therapy session.
Parent/Guardian Stress
42-item instrument with a five-point Likert scale designed to measure stress in parents whose child has a chronic illness or requires prolonged medical monitoring. It includes four domains or subscales. Minimum Score = 42; Maximum Score = 210. Higher scores indicate higher stress.
Time frame: Change from the start of the first therapy session to the end of the final therapy session.
Parent/Guardian Anxiety and Depression
Parent/Guardian anxiety and depressive symptoms as measured by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Two sub-scales (Anxiety \& Depression) scored separately. Minimum Score = 0; Maximum Score = 21. Higher score = higher anxiety and/or depression
Time frame: Change from the start of the first therapy session to the end of the final therapy session.
Mood/Affect
The PANAS-10 is a 10-item instrument that asks the child to rate adjectives of varying mood states according to how often the child feels joyful, cheerful, happy, lively, proud, miserable, mad, afraid, scared, and sad. The item response uses a five-point Likert scale ranging from 1 ("very slightly or none at all") to 5 ("extremely"). Minimum score = 10; Maximum score = 50. The higher the score, the better a child's mood/affect
Time frame: Change from the start of the first therapy session to the end of the final therapy session.
Motivation to Participate in Therapy
19-item scale with a six-point smiley-face scale and two open-ended questions to measure motivation from a child's perspective. It has six subscales (interest/enjoyment, competence, relatedness, autonomy, value/usefulness, and effort/importance).tems in each subscale are totaled and divided by the number of items to obtain an average score per subscale. The total scores in each subscale are added to obtain and overall motivation score. Higher scores within each subscale indicate a higher level of the concept in the subscale, whereas lower scores indicate the opposite. Thus, the scores indicate differences in the quality and type of motivation for the child. In addition, a higher total score indicates greater levels of motivation, overall.
Time frame: Immediately after each therapy session.
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