The goal for this trial is to test the effect of an educational programme on communication and play for healthcare professionals working with children and adolescents. The main questions to answer are: 1. Does a 45-minute educational intervention on communication and play have the same effect on healthcare professionals' self-efficacy in patient-centredness compared with a three-hour intervention? 2. What is the effect of the intervention on participants' motivation to engage in the educational activity, cognitive load, knowledge, satisfaction, and the impact on their individual practice ? Participants will be randomly assigned to either a 45-minute or a three-hour educational intervention. They will complete a questionnaire at three time points: before the intervention, immediately after, and at a 12-week follow-up.
BACKGROUND: Communication is an essential skill for all healthcare professionals working with children and adolescents in hospitals. There is growing focus on child-centred communication, which emphasize communicating directly with children and adolescents in healthcare rather than focusing on the parents. However, educational programmes for this remain limited while those that exist are heterogenous and often assessed without comparison groups or validated tools. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect on healthcare professionals' self-efficacy of a 45-minute vs three-hour educational intervention on communication and the use of play in clinical paediatric practice INTERVENTION: This trial evaluates the educational programme "Communication and Play with Children and Adolescents in Healthcare", which focuses on age-appropriate communication with paediatric patients, including the deliberate use of play. The trial compares two educational interventions that differ in duration (45 minutes vs. three hours) and learning methods. While both interventions include didactic learning, reflection, and discussions, the three-hour session adds role-play activities, whereas the 45-minute session delivers a condensed version without role-play. DESIGN: Single-centre, randomized, controlled, two-arm, noninferiority trial. A noninferiority design is used to assess whether there is a difference between the two educational interventions or if the 45-minute educational intervention is comparable to the three-hour educational intervention. SETTING: The University Hospital of Copenhagen - Rigshospitalet, Denmark. RECRUITMENT: All healthcare professionals working in the Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine at Rigshospitalet will be eligible to participate. Potential participants will be contacted by their leaders and be informed of the study. A written consent will then be obtained. SAMPLE SIZE: The sample size calculation assumes that the 45-minute intervention is as effective as the three-hour intervention for the primary outcome (self-efficacy). A non-inferiority margin of 0.25 points is set, meaning the mean self-efficacy score for the 45-minute intervention can be up to 0.25 points lower than that of the three-hour intervention without being considered inferior. Based on a one-sided two-sample t-test with a margin of 0.25, an alpha of 0.025, a power of 80%, and a standard deviation of 0.45 derived from the pilot study, the required sample size is 52 participants per group. Since the intervention is conducted in clusters of 25 participants, the sample size calculation is adjusted for cluster randomization by multiplying by the design effect, calculated as 1 + (cluster size - 1) × ICC. Assuming an ICC of 0.01 results in a design effect of 1.24 and an adjusted sample size of 65 per group. Accounting for a 10% dropout rate, the final required sample size is 72 per group. It is planned to include a total of 150 participants. RANDOMIZATION: Eligible participants will be randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio to either a 45-minute educational intervention or a three-hour educational intervention using computer-generated block randomization through REDCap. The randomization process will ensure an interprofessional distribution of participants in each intervention group. Both the statistician and the researchers conducting the analysis will be blinded to participant allocation. ETHICS: This trial complies with the principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki for biomedical research. Approval has been obtained from the Danish Data Protection Agency (P-2021-426). The study was approved but deemed exempt from requiring ethical approval by The Scientific Ethical Committees for the Capital Region of Denmark (Journal-nr.: H-21028050). Participation is entirely voluntary, and both educational interventions will take place during working hours at no cost to the participants. Participants may withdraw from the study at any time without any repercussions. To ensure confidentiality, all data will be securely stored in a protected database.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
150
A 3-hour educational intervention on communication and the use of play in paediatric clinical practice. Participants in both arms will have access to written learning material and an app that has been developed.
A 45-minute educational intervention on communication and the use of play in paediatric clinical practice. Participants in both arms will have access to written learning material and an app that has been developed.
Rigshospitalet
Copenhagen, Denmark
Self-efficacy
Self-efficacy measured using a 10-item questionnaire on a 5-point likert scale (1 = very low degree, 5 = very high degree). Questions are adapted from the Danish version of the validated Self-Efficacy in Patient-Centeredness Questionnaire (SEPCQ-27).This questionnaire evaluates participants' confidence in their ability to build relationships and communicate with children and adolescents in hospital settings.
Time frame: From enrollment to 12-week follow-up
Motivation
Motivation measured by using the validated Intrinsic Motivation Inventory (IMI). The IMI is a self-report questionnaire that measures a person's subjective experience related to a specific activity on a Likert scale ranging from 1 (Not at all true) to 7 (Very true). The standard IMI includes 22 items. For this study, the 7-item Interest/Enjoyment subscale is used, which is considered to directly measure intrinsic motivation related to a recently completed activity.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention
Self-evaluated knowledge about paediatric communication
The participants self-perceived knowledge about paediatric communication will be assessed using a single item. The question is "What is your knowledge about age-appropriate communication with children and adolescents?" (5 point Likert scale from "no knowledge" to "very high knowledge").
Time frame: From enrollment to 12 week follow-up
Cognitive load
Measured using the Mental effort rating scale by Paas (1992). This validated, single item measure asks participants to rate their perceived mental effort ranging from "very, very low mental effort" to "very, very high mental effort" on a 9-point Likert scale.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention
Satisfaction with intervention
Participant satisfaction will be measured using a pre-designed questionnaire to assess participants' perceptions and satisfaction with the interventions. It will include five items covering relevance to clinical practice, overall quality, and whether they would recommend it to other healthcare professionals. One open-ended questions will invite participants to share general feedback and any additional comments about their experience.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention
Impact on individual practice and training need
Impact on individual practice and training needs will be evaluated through five items that examine whether participants changed their own practice, engaged with further reading, or identified a need for more training. Possible scores range from 1 (not at all) to 5 (to a very high degree).
Time frame: 12 week follow-up
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