Cargando…

The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines

BACKGROUND: Clinical and real-world effectiveness data for the COVID-19 vaccines have shown that they are the best defense in preventing severe illness and death throughout the pandemic. However, in the US, some groups remain more hesitant than others about receiving COVID-19 vaccines. One important...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Stevens, Gabrielle, Johnson, Lisa C., Saunders, Catherine H., Schmidt, Peter, Sierpe, Ailyn, Thomeer, Rachael P., Little, N. Ruth, Cantrell, Matthew, Yen, Renata W., Pogue, Jacqueline A., Holahan, Timothy, Schubbe, Danielle C., Forcino, Rachel C., Fillbrook, Branden, Sheppard, Rowena, Wooten, Celeste, Goldmann, Don, O’Malley, A. James, Dubé, Eve, Durand, Marie-Anne, Elwyn, Glyn
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9948785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36823559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-15266-x
_version_ 1784892852286783488
author Stevens, Gabrielle
Johnson, Lisa C.
Saunders, Catherine H.
Schmidt, Peter
Sierpe, Ailyn
Thomeer, Rachael P.
Little, N. Ruth
Cantrell, Matthew
Yen, Renata W.
Pogue, Jacqueline A.
Holahan, Timothy
Schubbe, Danielle C.
Forcino, Rachel C.
Fillbrook, Branden
Sheppard, Rowena
Wooten, Celeste
Goldmann, Don
O’Malley, A. James
Dubé, Eve
Durand, Marie-Anne
Elwyn, Glyn
author_facet Stevens, Gabrielle
Johnson, Lisa C.
Saunders, Catherine H.
Schmidt, Peter
Sierpe, Ailyn
Thomeer, Rachael P.
Little, N. Ruth
Cantrell, Matthew
Yen, Renata W.
Pogue, Jacqueline A.
Holahan, Timothy
Schubbe, Danielle C.
Forcino, Rachel C.
Fillbrook, Branden
Sheppard, Rowena
Wooten, Celeste
Goldmann, Don
O’Malley, A. James
Dubé, Eve
Durand, Marie-Anne
Elwyn, Glyn
author_sort Stevens, Gabrielle
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Clinical and real-world effectiveness data for the COVID-19 vaccines have shown that they are the best defense in preventing severe illness and death throughout the pandemic. However, in the US, some groups remain more hesitant than others about receiving COVID-19 vaccines. One important group is long-term care workers (LTCWs), especially because they risk infecting the vulnerable and clinically complex populations they serve. There is a lack of research about how best to increase vaccine confidence, especially in frontline LTCWs and healthcare staff. Our aims are to: (1) compare the impact of two interventions delivered online to enhanced usual practice on LTCW COVID-19 vaccine confidence and other pre-specified secondary outcomes, (2) determine if LTCWs’ characteristics and other factors mediate and moderate the interventions’ effect on study outcomes, and (3) explore the implementation characteristics, contexts, and processes needed to sustain a wider use of the interventions. METHODS: We will conduct a three-arm randomized controlled effectiveness-implementation hybrid (type 2) trial, with randomization at the participant level. Arm 1 is a dialogue-based webinar intervention facilitated by a LTCW and a medical expert and guided by an evidence-based COVID-19 vaccine decision tool. Arm 2 is a curated social media web application intervention featuring interactive, dynamic content about COVID-19 and relevant vaccines. Arm 3 is enhanced usual practice, which directs participants to online public health information about COVID-19 vaccines. Participants will be recruited via online posts and advertisements, email invitations, and in-person visits to care settings. Trial data will be collected at four time points using online surveys. The primary outcome is COVID-19 vaccine confidence. Secondary outcomes include vaccine uptake, vaccine and booster intent for those unvaccinated, likelihood of recommending vaccination (both initial series and booster), feeling informed about the vaccines, identification of vaccine information and misinformation, and trust in COVID-19 vaccine information provided by different people and organizations. Exploration of intervention implementation will involve interviews with study participants and other stakeholders, an in-depth process evaluation, and testing during a subsequent sustainability phase. DISCUSSION: Study findings will contribute new knowledge about how to increase COVID-19 vaccine confidence and effective informational modalities for LTCWs. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT05168800 at ClinicalTrials.gov, registered December 23, 2021. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12889-023-15266-x.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9948785
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99487852023-02-24 The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines Stevens, Gabrielle Johnson, Lisa C. Saunders, Catherine H. Schmidt, Peter Sierpe, Ailyn Thomeer, Rachael P. Little, N. Ruth Cantrell, Matthew Yen, Renata W. Pogue, Jacqueline A. Holahan, Timothy Schubbe, Danielle C. Forcino, Rachel C. Fillbrook, Branden Sheppard, Rowena Wooten, Celeste Goldmann, Don O’Malley, A. James Dubé, Eve Durand, Marie-Anne Elwyn, Glyn BMC Public Health Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Clinical and real-world effectiveness data for the COVID-19 vaccines have shown that they are the best defense in preventing severe illness and death throughout the pandemic. However, in the US, some groups remain more hesitant than others about receiving COVID-19 vaccines. One important group is long-term care workers (LTCWs), especially because they risk infecting the vulnerable and clinically complex populations they serve. There is a lack of research about how best to increase vaccine confidence, especially in frontline LTCWs and healthcare staff. Our aims are to: (1) compare the impact of two interventions delivered online to enhanced usual practice on LTCW COVID-19 vaccine confidence and other pre-specified secondary outcomes, (2) determine if LTCWs’ characteristics and other factors mediate and moderate the interventions’ effect on study outcomes, and (3) explore the implementation characteristics, contexts, and processes needed to sustain a wider use of the interventions. METHODS: We will conduct a three-arm randomized controlled effectiveness-implementation hybrid (type 2) trial, with randomization at the participant level. Arm 1 is a dialogue-based webinar intervention facilitated by a LTCW and a medical expert and guided by an evidence-based COVID-19 vaccine decision tool. Arm 2 is a curated social media web application intervention featuring interactive, dynamic content about COVID-19 and relevant vaccines. Arm 3 is enhanced usual practice, which directs participants to online public health information about COVID-19 vaccines. Participants will be recruited via online posts and advertisements, email invitations, and in-person visits to care settings. Trial data will be collected at four time points using online surveys. The primary outcome is COVID-19 vaccine confidence. Secondary outcomes include vaccine uptake, vaccine and booster intent for those unvaccinated, likelihood of recommending vaccination (both initial series and booster), feeling informed about the vaccines, identification of vaccine information and misinformation, and trust in COVID-19 vaccine information provided by different people and organizations. Exploration of intervention implementation will involve interviews with study participants and other stakeholders, an in-depth process evaluation, and testing during a subsequent sustainability phase. DISCUSSION: Study findings will contribute new knowledge about how to increase COVID-19 vaccine confidence and effective informational modalities for LTCWs. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT05168800 at ClinicalTrials.gov, registered December 23, 2021. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12889-023-15266-x. BioMed Central 2023-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9948785/ /pubmed/36823559 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-15266-x Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Open AccessThis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) . The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) ) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Stevens, Gabrielle
Johnson, Lisa C.
Saunders, Catherine H.
Schmidt, Peter
Sierpe, Ailyn
Thomeer, Rachael P.
Little, N. Ruth
Cantrell, Matthew
Yen, Renata W.
Pogue, Jacqueline A.
Holahan, Timothy
Schubbe, Danielle C.
Forcino, Rachel C.
Fillbrook, Branden
Sheppard, Rowena
Wooten, Celeste
Goldmann, Don
O’Malley, A. James
Dubé, Eve
Durand, Marie-Anne
Elwyn, Glyn
The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title_full The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title_fullStr The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title_full_unstemmed The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title_short The CONFIDENT study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the COVID-19 vaccines
title_sort confident study protocol: a randomized controlled trial comparing two methods to increase long-term care worker confidence in the covid-19 vaccines
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9948785/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36823559
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-15266-x
work_keys_str_mv AT stevensgabrielle theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT johnsonlisac theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT saunderscatherineh theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT schmidtpeter theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT sierpeailyn theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT thomeerrachaelp theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT littlenruth theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT cantrellmatthew theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT yenrenataw theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT poguejacquelinea theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT holahantimothy theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT schubbedaniellec theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT forcinorachelc theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT fillbrookbranden theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT sheppardrowena theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT wootenceleste theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT goldmanndon theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT omalleyajames theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT dubeeve theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT durandmarieanne theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT elwynglyn theconfidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT stevensgabrielle confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT johnsonlisac confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT saunderscatherineh confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT schmidtpeter confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT sierpeailyn confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT thomeerrachaelp confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT littlenruth confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT cantrellmatthew confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT yenrenataw confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT poguejacquelinea confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT holahantimothy confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT schubbedaniellec confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT forcinorachelc confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT fillbrookbranden confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT sheppardrowena confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT wootenceleste confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT goldmanndon confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT omalleyajames confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT dubeeve confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT durandmarieanne confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines
AT elwynglyn confidentstudyprotocolarandomizedcontrolledtrialcomparingtwomethodstoincreaselongtermcareworkerconfidenceinthecovid19vaccines