Youth with epilepsy (YWE) are significantly more likely than their peers without epilepsy to experience isolation, interpersonal victimization, and low relationship satisfaction. This is a serious health concern. Poor social support, real or perceived, is consistently correlated to worsened outcomes in every domain of health-related quality of life. As YWE are two to five times more likely than their peers without epilepsy to develop a mental health condition, poor social support is likely a bidirectional risk factor. Currently, there are no best practices or recommendations for clinicians or other youth-serving professionals to reference when it comes to improving the perceived social support of YWE specifically. The research team has drawn from multiple fields of scientific knowledge to develop a novel intervention that aims to provide YWE with knowledge, skills, connections, and positive emotional support that can help them to bolster their support system at every level of the social ecological model (SEM). The proposed study is a pilot of this intervention to test its acceptability and appropriateness according to YWE participants ages 12 to 26. The intervention's impact on participants social-emotional learning skills and the feasibility of expanding the study protocol for use in a large, multisite randomized control trial will also be explored. The goal of this research study is to help evaluate a new program for young people diagnosed with epilepsy that will build up young people's social opportunities, interpersonal skills, and sources of emotional support. The investigators want to research the impact of this program. From this study, the investigators hope to learn what the program does well, and in what ways it could be improved from the perspective of YWE.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
33
Five total sessions, 60-minutes each, with one session every 7 days (+/- 21 days between sessions), Session activities include discussion prompts, interactive learning methods, skill rehearsals, mindfulness / somatic exercises and lecture slides facilitated by a trained facilitator.
Boston Medical Center, Neurology and remote
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Feasibility of study processes
Number of sessions attended per participant.
Time frame: 4 months
Acceptability of the intervention
A likert scale will be used to assess satisfaction from 1 to 10 where 10 is highly acceptable and 1 is not acceptable.
Time frame: 4 months
Change in perceived social support (PSS)
This outcome will be assessed with the Youth Thrive (YT) Framework Survey Part 1: Social Connections and Concrete Supports combine subscales. Each YT subscale includes 10 to 16 individual Likert scale questions. Scores are generated by assigning values of 1 to 5 to the Likert scale (1 = not at all like me, 5 = very much like me) for 'positive items' and an inverse value scale for 'negative items' and then totalling all the items within the subscale. Higher total scores indicate a higher level of PSS.
Time frame: Baseline, 4 months
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