| Literature DB >> 26764218 |
Wytske W Geense1, Betsie Gi van Gaal, Jacqueline L Knoll, Elisabeth Am Cornelissen, Lisette Schoonhoven, Gerjo Kok.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The care for children with a chronic kidney disease (CKD) is complex. Parents of these children may experience high levels of stress in managing their child's disease, potentially leading to negative effects on their child's health outcomes. Although the experienced problems are well known, adequate (online) support for these parents is lacking.Entities:
Keywords: child; chronic kidney failure; family health; health promotion; intervention mapping; parents; program development; telemedicine
Year: 2016 PMID: 26764218 PMCID: PMC4730104 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.4837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Figure 1The Intervention Mapping protocol: overview of the six steps and corresponding tasks [23].
Figure 2PRECEDE model [23]. Chronic kidney diseases: CKD.
Examples of performance and change objectives of the behavioral outcome “Parents find a balance in their responsibilities as a caregiver for their child, and their own personal life.”
| Performance objectives | Change objectives | ||||
| Knowledge | Attitude | Self-efficacy | Skills | Social influence | |
|
| Can mention ways to set their limits and say no | Express the benefits of setting their limits | Express their confidence in setting their limits and saying no to others, without regret | Describe step by step how they will say no to others and set their limits | Recognize that their social environment may be unaware of the burden and problems they experience |
|
| Explain the relation between stress and fatigue and not setting their limits | Express positive attitudes toward setting limits and saying no |
|
|
|
|
| Express the consequences of their daily care for their child and not handing over the care, on symptoms such as stress and fatigue | Express the benefits of handing over their care for their child to others | Express their confidence to hand over their care | Describe how they will hand over their care | Recognize that their environment really wants to support them and will take over the care |
|
|
| Express positive attitude toward handing over their care for having more time for themselves |
|
|
|
|
|
| Accept the possibility that the caregiver can make mistakes |
|
|
|
An overview of the determinants, used methods, and parameters in the training module “Setting limits”.
| Determinant | Method (and related theory) | Parameters for use |
| Knowledge | Advanced organizers | Schematic representations of the content or guides to what is to be learned. |
|
| Elaboration | Individual with high motivation and cognitive ability; messages that are personally relevant, surprising, repeated, self-pacing, not distracting, easily understandable; messages that are not too discrepant and cause anticipation of interaction. |
| Awareness | Self monitoring of behavior | The monitoring must be of the specific behavior (that is, not of a physiological state or health outcome). The data must be interpreted and used. The reward must be reinforcing to the individual. |
|
| Self reevaluation/ consciousness raising | Can use feedback and confrontation; however, raising awareness must be quickly followed by increase in problem solving ability and self-efficacy. |
| Attitude | Persuasive communication | Messages need to be relevant and not too discrepant from the beliefs of the individual; can be stimulated by surprise and repetition. Will include arguments. For central processing of arguments they need to be new to the message receiver. |
| Social influence | Provide information about peer behavior | Positive expectations are available in the environment. |
|
| Stimulate communication to mobilize social support | Combines caring trust, openness, and acceptance with support for behavioral change; assumes that positive support is available in the environment. |
| Self-efficacy | Planning coping responses | Identification of high risk situations and practice of coping response. |
| Skills | Guided practice | Sub skill demonstration, instruction, and enactment with individual feedback; requires supervision by an experienced person; some environmental changes cannot be rehearsed. |
|
| Modeling | Attention, remembrance, self-efficacy, and skills, reinforcement |
|
| Feedback | Feedback needs to be individual, follow the behavior in time and be specific. |
Topics and sessions in the online training module “Setting limits”.
| Session | Topics |
| 1. Welcome |
Short introduction in why setting limits is important for parents and what they will learn in this training module Testimony by parent why it is hard to set your limits Information how they can ask their social environment for support |
| 2. Saying “no”, why it is important |
Test how easily parents say no Information about why it is important to say no, the advantages, and why it is so difficult Testimony by parent why it is difficult Information about thoughts and their influence on saying no Exercise to write down their thoughts |
| 3. Saying “no”, how to do? |
Information about different ways to say no (sub assertive, assertive, aggressive), steps in how you can say no and what is important Exercises to say no, varying from easy to difficult and to become aware what went right and wrong Tips to discuss the exercise with their partner or friends |
|
4. Handing over the care
|
Testimonies of parents why it is difficult to hand over the care for their child to others Information about why it is important to hand over their child’s care Exercise to hand over their child, for example: to become aware of the advantages of handing over care Exercise with their partner to discover which activities they find important and how they can make time for it Exercise to define their social network, to discover who can provide what kind of support Tips by health care professionals and parents to hand over care Exercise to describe what they can do when things go wrong Phone numbers of health care professionals when parents find it hard to hand over their care |