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Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future
SIMPLE SUMMARY: We assessed a new group-based cognitive behavior therapy videoconferencing program to support parents of childhood cancer survivors. The trial allocated parents to three groups: Cascade, peer-support, waitlist. Cascade achieved good parent engagement. We successfully delivered Cascad...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8615912/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34830752 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13225597 |
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author | Wakefield, Claire E. Sansom-Daly, Ursula M. McGill, Brittany C. Hetherington, Kate Ellis, Sarah J. Robertson, Eden G. Donoghoe, Mark W. McCarthy, Maria Kelada, Lauren Girgis, Afaf King, Madeleine Grootenhuis, Martha Anazodo, Antoinette Patterson, Pandora Lowe, Cherie Dalla-Pozza, Luciano Miles, Gordon Cohn, Richard J. |
author_facet | Wakefield, Claire E. Sansom-Daly, Ursula M. McGill, Brittany C. Hetherington, Kate Ellis, Sarah J. Robertson, Eden G. Donoghoe, Mark W. McCarthy, Maria Kelada, Lauren Girgis, Afaf King, Madeleine Grootenhuis, Martha Anazodo, Antoinette Patterson, Pandora Lowe, Cherie Dalla-Pozza, Luciano Miles, Gordon Cohn, Richard J. |
author_sort | Wakefield, Claire E. |
collection | PubMed |
description | SIMPLE SUMMARY: We assessed a new group-based cognitive behavior therapy videoconferencing program to support parents of childhood cancer survivors. The trial allocated parents to three groups: Cascade, peer-support, waitlist. Cascade achieved good parent engagement. We successfully delivered Cascade to participants who lived >3200 km apart. Any technical difficulties caused only minor disruptions. Most Cascade parents were satisfied and reported experiencing benefits from the program. However, Cascade did not improve our main outcomes, including parents’ quality of life, depression and anxiety. Cascade parents reported a short-term improvement in their confidence to use the skills they learnt, but this did not translate into actual use. After six months, Cascade parents felt their child survivor had lower psychological health than waitlisted parents. Our findings show that while some parents find Cascade helpful, it may not suit everyone. We used these findings to further improve Cascade and will trial the new version in future. ABSTRACT: We conducted a three-armed trial to assess Cascade, a four-module group videoconferencing cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) intervention for parents of childhood cancer survivors currently aged <18 years. We allocated parents to Cascade, an attention control (peer-support group), or a waitlist. The primary outcome was parents’ health-related quality of life (PedsQL-Family Impact/EQ-5D-5L) six months post-intervention. Parents also reported their anxiety/depression, parenting self-agency, fear of recurrence, health service and psychotropic medication use, engagement in productive activities, confidence to use, and actual use of, CBT skills, and their child’s quality of life. Seventy-six parents opted in; 56 commenced the trial. Cascade achieved good parent engagement and most Cascade parents were satisfied and reported benefits. Some parents expressed concerns about the time burden and the group format. Most outcomes did not differ across trial arms. Cascade parents felt more confident to use more CBT skills than peer-support and waitlisted parents, but this did not lead to more use of CBT. Cascade parents reported lower psychosocial health scores for their child than waitlisted parents. Cascade parents’ health service use, psychotropic medication use, and days engaged in productive activities did not improve, despite some improvements in waitlisted parents. Our trial was difficult to implement, but participants were largely satisfied. Cascade did not improve most outcomes, possibly because many parents were functioning well pre-enrolment. We used these findings to improve Cascade and will trial the new version in future. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8615912 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | MDPI |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-86159122021-11-26 Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future Wakefield, Claire E. Sansom-Daly, Ursula M. McGill, Brittany C. Hetherington, Kate Ellis, Sarah J. Robertson, Eden G. Donoghoe, Mark W. McCarthy, Maria Kelada, Lauren Girgis, Afaf King, Madeleine Grootenhuis, Martha Anazodo, Antoinette Patterson, Pandora Lowe, Cherie Dalla-Pozza, Luciano Miles, Gordon Cohn, Richard J. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: We assessed a new group-based cognitive behavior therapy videoconferencing program to support parents of childhood cancer survivors. The trial allocated parents to three groups: Cascade, peer-support, waitlist. Cascade achieved good parent engagement. We successfully delivered Cascade to participants who lived >3200 km apart. Any technical difficulties caused only minor disruptions. Most Cascade parents were satisfied and reported experiencing benefits from the program. However, Cascade did not improve our main outcomes, including parents’ quality of life, depression and anxiety. Cascade parents reported a short-term improvement in their confidence to use the skills they learnt, but this did not translate into actual use. After six months, Cascade parents felt their child survivor had lower psychological health than waitlisted parents. Our findings show that while some parents find Cascade helpful, it may not suit everyone. We used these findings to further improve Cascade and will trial the new version in future. ABSTRACT: We conducted a three-armed trial to assess Cascade, a four-module group videoconferencing cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) intervention for parents of childhood cancer survivors currently aged <18 years. We allocated parents to Cascade, an attention control (peer-support group), or a waitlist. The primary outcome was parents’ health-related quality of life (PedsQL-Family Impact/EQ-5D-5L) six months post-intervention. Parents also reported their anxiety/depression, parenting self-agency, fear of recurrence, health service and psychotropic medication use, engagement in productive activities, confidence to use, and actual use of, CBT skills, and their child’s quality of life. Seventy-six parents opted in; 56 commenced the trial. Cascade achieved good parent engagement and most Cascade parents were satisfied and reported benefits. Some parents expressed concerns about the time burden and the group format. Most outcomes did not differ across trial arms. Cascade parents felt more confident to use more CBT skills than peer-support and waitlisted parents, but this did not lead to more use of CBT. Cascade parents reported lower psychosocial health scores for their child than waitlisted parents. Cascade parents’ health service use, psychotropic medication use, and days engaged in productive activities did not improve, despite some improvements in waitlisted parents. Our trial was difficult to implement, but participants were largely satisfied. Cascade did not improve most outcomes, possibly because many parents were functioning well pre-enrolment. We used these findings to improve Cascade and will trial the new version in future. MDPI 2021-11-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8615912/ /pubmed/34830752 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13225597 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). |
spellingShingle | Article Wakefield, Claire E. Sansom-Daly, Ursula M. McGill, Brittany C. Hetherington, Kate Ellis, Sarah J. Robertson, Eden G. Donoghoe, Mark W. McCarthy, Maria Kelada, Lauren Girgis, Afaf King, Madeleine Grootenhuis, Martha Anazodo, Antoinette Patterson, Pandora Lowe, Cherie Dalla-Pozza, Luciano Miles, Gordon Cohn, Richard J. Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title | Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title_full | Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title_fullStr | Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title_full_unstemmed | Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title_short | Providing Psychological Support to Parents of Childhood Cancer Survivors: ‘Cascade’ Intervention Trial Results and Lessons for the Future |
title_sort | providing psychological support to parents of childhood cancer survivors: ‘cascade’ intervention trial results and lessons for the future |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8615912/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34830752 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13225597 |
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