| Literature DB >> 24758566 |
Bryan Feenstra, Laura Boland, Margaret L Lawson, Denise Harrison, Jennifer Kryworuchko, Michelle Leblanc, Dawn Stacey1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children often need support in health decision-making. The objective of this study was to review characteristics and effectiveness of interventions that support health decision-making of children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24758566 PMCID: PMC3999734 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-14-109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for article eligibility
| • Children (≤ 18 years) who are facing a health-related decision | • Children not treated as active participants in decision-making | |
| • Decisions about participation in health research | • Decisions not directly pertaining to their health or hypothetical decisions | |
| • Interventions to support children’s decision-making needs | • Interventions that support only the information needs of children | |
| • Randomized controlled trials | • Qualitative studies, descriptive studies, cohort studies | |
| • Non-randomized controlled trials | • Editorials, opinion articles | |
| • Interrupted time series | ||
| • Controlled before-and-after | ||
| • Outcomes that affect the quality of the decision or the decision-making process for children/youth | • Studies that do not report at least one of the outcomes relating to the quality of the decision or the decision-making process | |
| • English or French | • Other languages | |
| • Published | • Unpublished studies | |
| • Peer-reviewed | • Non peer-reviewed |
Search strategy used for Pubmed
| 1 | intervention* OR intervene* OR "Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice" [Mesh] OR "Social Support" [Mesh] OR "Family" [Mesh] OR "Patient Participation" [Mesh] OR "Health communication" [Mesh] OR "Health education" [Mesh] OR "Decision Support Techniques" [Mesh] OR "Decision Making, Computer-Assisted" [Mesh]) |
| 2 | ("Decision Making" [Mesh]) |
| 3 | (Humans [Mesh]) |
| 4 | (Clinical Trial [ptyp] OR Meta-Analysis [ptyp] OR Randomized Controlled Trial [ptyp] OR Review [ptyp] OR Classical Article [ptyp] OR Comparative Study [ptyp] OR Controlled Clinical Trial [ptyp] OR Evaluation Studies [ptyp] OR Historical Article [ptyp] OR Journal Article [ptyp] OR Multicenter Study [ptyp] OR Patient Education Handout [ptyp] OR Validation Studies [ptyp]) |
| 5 | (English [lang] OR French [lang]) |
| 7 | 1 AND 2 AND 3 AND 4 AND 5 |
| 8 | (infant [MeSH] OR child [MeSH] OR adolescent [MeSH]) |
| 9 | 7 AND 8 |
Figure 1Literature flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies (N = 5)
| Rhee, 2008 [ | RCT | Partaking in risk behaviors | 41 children with asthma (20a + 21b); 4 rural outpatient clinics and 1 high school | Coaching and computer based program v. attention placebo | Feasibility of the decision-making program | d: Low Risk | g: Low Risk | j: Low Risk |
| e: Low Risk | h: Unclear | |||||||
| f: Low Risk | i: Unclear | |||||||
| Lyon, 2009 [ | RCT | End of life decision-making | 40 children with HIV and their parents (21a + 19b); 2 hospital outpatient clinics | Coaching v. attention placebo | Communication quality, congruence of treatment preferences, decisional conflict satisfaction | d: Low Risk | gg: Unclear | j: Low Risk |
| e: Low Risk | h: Low Risk | |||||||
| f: Unclear | ii: Unclear | |||||||
| Adams, 2009 [ | RCT | Sun exposure v. sun protection | 819 children (395a + 424b); primary care physicians office | Coaching and computer program v. attention placebo | Sun protection behaviors, pros for protection, pros for exposure, decisional balance | d: Unclear | g: Unclear | j: Low Risk |
| e: Unclear | h: Unclear | |||||||
| f: Low Risk | i: Unclear | |||||||
| Hollen, 1999 [ | CBA | Partaking in risk behaviors | 64 cancer-surviving children (21a + 43c); campground | Workshop and weekly assignments v. no intervention | Decision-making, risk motivation, risk behaviors | d: High Risk | g: Unclear | j: Low Risk |
| e: High Risk | h: Unclear | |||||||
| f: High Risk | i: Low Risk | |||||||
| Adelman, 1990 [ | Non-randomized CT | Psycho-educational decision-making | 85 families (32a + 20b + 33c); university clinic | Pre-conference coaching v. no intervention v. attention placebo | Child participation | d: High Risk | g: High Risk | j: Low Risk |
| e: High Risk | h: Unclear | |||||||
| f: High Risk | i: High Risk | |||||||
aIntervention group.
bPlacebo group.
cNo intervention group.
dRandom sequence generation.
eAllocation concealment.
fBlinding of participants AND personnel.
gBlinding of outcome assessment.
hIncomplete outcome data.
iSelective reporting.
jOther sources of bias.
Characteristics of Decision Support Interventions (N = 5)
| Rhee, 2008 [ | Decision support | Coaching guided by risk behavior fact sheet. Computer-based decision-making module. | Healthcare Provider | Main intervention plus CD-ROM intervention booster at 2 and 4 mo. post-intervention | Coaching = 10 min, Computer = 60 min, |
| Intervention boosters: computer based decision-making module, workbook, and substance prevention computer program. | 2 mo. Booster = 90 min | ||||
| 4 mo. booster = 30 min | |||||
| Control | Sham computer program of comparable length featuring study skills. | Participant directed | Computer program only | Comparable to the intervention program minus the booster | |
| No booster. | |||||
| Lyon, 2009 [ | Decision support | Three semi-structured interviews: 1. | Trained Facilitator | Three sessions, 1 week apart | 180- 270 min. (for three sessions) |
| Control | Three sessions re: 1. non-medical developmental history, 2. safety information, 3. career planning. | Trained Facilitator | Three sessions, frequency not specified | Comparable to the intervention | |
| Adams, 2009 [ | Decision support | Brief coaching, interactive computer sessions, telephone assessments, printed tailored feedback, a brief printed manual, mailed tip sheets, and samples of sunscreen. | Healthcare provider/ | Main intervention at baseline and 12 months | Coaching session = 2 to 3 min. |
| Participant directed | At 3, 6, 15, and 18 mo. children phoned for the expert system assessments | Sun Smart System = 20 min | |||
| Follow up assessments = not specified | |||||
| Control | Computer program with monthly stage-matched telephone calls, printed manual and mail at 24 mo. Information related to physical activity, sedentary behavior, total fat intake, and servings per day of fruits and vegetables. | Trained Facilitator | Stage matched to intervention group | Not specified | |
| Hollen, 1999 [ | Decision support | Camp workshop integrating survivorship, quality decision-making skills, children risk behaviors, and social support from peers and health professionals. Follow up workbook exercises with audio-tape. | Trained Facilitator | Workshop plus 4 weekly assignments | Workshop = 1 day. |
| Weekly assignments = not specified | |||||
| Control | No intervention. | | Not specified | Not specified | |
| Adelman, 1990 [ | Decision support | Pre-conference coaching encouraging and facilitating child’s participation in the conference. | Trained Facilitator | Main intervention only | 5 to 15 min |
| Control | 1. Attention placebo-expanded neutral explanation of the conference process. | Trained Facilitator | Control 1: Explanation only | Control 1: Not specified | |
| 2. No-intervention. | Control 2: Not specified | Control 2: Not specified |
Elements of the decision support interventions (N = 5)
| Coaching alone | | ✓ | | | ✓ |
| Coaching and educational aid | ✓ | | ✓ | | |
| Education alone | | | | ✓ | |
| Decision defined/explained | ✓ | ✓ | | ✓ | ✓ |
| Assess/discuss patient’s decision-making needs | | ✓ | ✓ | | |
| Options (including alternatives) presented | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Benefits of options discussed | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Risks of options discussed | ✓ | ✓ | | ✓ | |
| Understanding assessed/clarified | | ✓ | ✓ | | |
| Values/preferences discussed | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Build skills in deliberation, communication, and accessing support | | ✓ | | | ✓ |
| Ability/self-efficacy to enact plan discussed | | | | | ✓ |
| Decision made or explicitly deferred | | ✓ | | | |
| Facilitate progress in decision-making | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Follow-up arranged | | ✓ | | | |
✓= decision support element present.
Summary of outcomes examined and statistical significance (N = 5)
| Overall quality of the decision-making process | | | | No statistically significant difference | Statistically significant at 1 |
| Congruence for values and chosen option | | | No statistically significant difference | | |
| Child–parent congruence for treatment option preference | Statistically significant difference on 1 of 3 scenarios | | | | |
| Satisfaction | Statistically significant for 2 of 3 intervention components. ( | No statistically significant difference | | | |
| Participation | | No statistically significant difference | | | |
| Decisional conflict | Statistically significant informed sub-score ( | | | | |
| Communication | No statistically significant difference | ||||