Pilot Feasibility of the Pediatric Cancer Resource Equity (PediCARE) Intervention
Status: | Not yet recruiting |
---|---|
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | Any - 17 |
Updated: | 2/10/2019 |
Start Date: | March 25, 2019 |
End Date: | May 1, 2020 |
Contact: | Kira Bona, MD |
Email: | Kira_Bona@dfci.harvard.edu |
Phone: | 617-632-4688 |
The goal of this new intervention is to make it easier for families to meet their basic
household needs during childhood cancer treatment. The investigators want to learn how to
best use PediCARE to help care for families.
household needs during childhood cancer treatment. The investigators want to learn how to
best use PediCARE to help care for families.
The investigators know from previous studies that in addition to the basic worries about a
child's cancer therapy, many families experience financial stress during their child's
treatment. Financial stress may include difficulty paying the rent or mortgage, keeping the
electricity or heat on, or putting food on the table. One of the investigators' research
goals is to find ways to decrease the financial impact of treatment on each family, and make
sure that financial stress does not impact a child's experience during treatment.
The investigators have developed a new supportive care intervention called PediCARE (which
stands for Pediatric Cancer Resource Equity) which provides support for groceries (using an
online grocery delivery service called Instacart) and transportation to and from the hospital
(using rides through services such as Uber and Lyft). The investigators have evaluated the
PediCARE support program in a small group of parents and used feedback from these parents to
improve PediCARE. The investigators are now ready to do a feasibility study to find out
whether the investigators can reliably deliver the PediCARE intervention to families.
This type of study is called a feasibility study. The goal of this research study is to learn
whether the investigators can successfully give the PediCARE support program to families—in
other words, whether most families are interested in participating in a randomized study
about the PediCARE support program and whether they use the PediCARE support program during
the study. The investigators will also begin to understand whether the PediCARE support
program reduces financial stress for families during therapy. Long-term, the investigators
plan to test the PediCARE support program in a larger group of randomized families to answer
the question of whether PediCARE reduces financial stress for families and improves outcomes
during cancer treatment
child's cancer therapy, many families experience financial stress during their child's
treatment. Financial stress may include difficulty paying the rent or mortgage, keeping the
electricity or heat on, or putting food on the table. One of the investigators' research
goals is to find ways to decrease the financial impact of treatment on each family, and make
sure that financial stress does not impact a child's experience during treatment.
The investigators have developed a new supportive care intervention called PediCARE (which
stands for Pediatric Cancer Resource Equity) which provides support for groceries (using an
online grocery delivery service called Instacart) and transportation to and from the hospital
(using rides through services such as Uber and Lyft). The investigators have evaluated the
PediCARE support program in a small group of parents and used feedback from these parents to
improve PediCARE. The investigators are now ready to do a feasibility study to find out
whether the investigators can reliably deliver the PediCARE intervention to families.
This type of study is called a feasibility study. The goal of this research study is to learn
whether the investigators can successfully give the PediCARE support program to families—in
other words, whether most families are interested in participating in a randomized study
about the PediCARE support program and whether they use the PediCARE support program during
the study. The investigators will also begin to understand whether the PediCARE support
program reduces financial stress for families during therapy. Long-term, the investigators
plan to test the PediCARE support program in a larger group of randomized families to answer
the question of whether PediCARE reduces financial stress for families and improves outcomes
during cancer treatment
Inclusion Criteria:
- Child newly diagnosed with cancer within 2 months;
- Planned receipt of at least 4 cycles of chemotherapy at DFCI or UAB;
- Parent/guardian screened positive for HMH*;
- Child is <18 years at time of enrollment
- In accordance with previous research1 families will be operationalized as having HMH
for eligibility purposes if they report at least one of the below four concrete needs
assessed during routine clinical care as follows:
- Food insecurity.
- Housing Insecurity.
- Energy Insecurity.
- Transportation Insecurity.
HMH screening is performed as standard of care by site-specific psychosocial providers.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Child with diagnosis of relapsed cancer;
- Child planned to receive fewer than 4 cycles of chemotherapy
- Child planned to receive observation, radiation or surgical resection only;
- Planned transfer of child to a non-DFCI or UAB facility for chemotherapy treatment;
- Foreign national family receiving cancer care as an Embassy-pay patient;
- Child is enrolled on DFCI 16-001 (due to ongoing embedded descriptive HMH study)
We found this trial at
1
site
450 Brookline Ave
Boston, Massachusetts 2215
Boston, Massachusetts 2215
617-632-3000
Principal Investigator: Kira Bona, MD
Phone: 617-632-4688
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Since it’s founding in 1947, Dana-Farber has been committed to providing adults...
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