Resourcefulness Intervention Efficacy for Parent Caregivers of Technology-Dependent Children: A Randomized Trial.
Valerie Boebel TolyJaclene A ZauszniewskiJiao YuAbdus SattarBethany RusincovitchCarol M MusilPublished in: Western journal of nursing research (2021)
Parent caregivers of children who require lifesaving technology (e.g., mechanical ventilation, feeding tubes) must maintain a high level of vigilance 24/7. A two-arm randomized controlled trial tested the efficacy of a resourcefulness intervention on parents' mental/physical health and family functioning at four time points over six months. Participants ( n = 93) cared for their technology-dependent children <18 years at home. The intervention arm received teaching on social (help-seeking), personal (self-help) resourcefulness skills; access to the intervention video and skill application video-vignettes; four weeks of skills reinforcement using daily logs; four weekly phone contacts; and booster sessions at two- and four-month postenrollment. The attention control arm received phone contact at identical time points plus the current standard of care. Statistically significant improvement was noted; fewer depressive cognitions and improved physical health for the intervention participants than attention control participants over time after controlling for covariates. The findings support the resourcefulness intervention efficacy.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- mental health
- healthcare
- mechanical ventilation
- study protocol
- young adults
- palliative care
- physical activity
- public health
- intensive care unit
- working memory
- health information
- clinical trial
- medical students
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- preterm birth
- posttraumatic stress disorder