Abstract
Introduction
Using patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) with children have been described as ‘giving a voice to the child’. Few studies have examined the routine use of these measures as potentially therapeutic interventions. This study aims to investigate: (1) the effectiveness of feedback using graphical displays of information from electronic PROMs (ePROMs) that target health-related quality of life, to improve health outcomes, referrals and treatment satisfaction and (2) the implementation of ePROMs and graphical displays by assessing acceptability, sustainability, cost, fidelity and context of the intervention and study processes.
Methods and analysis
A hybrid II effectiveness-implementation study will be conducted from February 2020 with children with life-altering skin conditions attending two outpatient clinics at a specialist paediatric children’s hospital. A pragmatic randomised controlled trial and mixed methods process evaluation will be completed. Randomisation will occur at the child participant level. Children or parent proxies completing baseline ePROMs will be randomised to: (1) completion of ePROMs plus graphical displays of ePROM results to treating clinicians in consultations, versus (2) completion of ePROMs without graphical display of ePROM results. The primary outcome of the effectiveness trial will be overall health-related quality of life of children. Secondary outcomes will include other health-related quality of life outcomes (eg, child psychosocial and physical health, parent psychosocial health), referrals and treatment satisfaction. Trial data will be primarily analysed using linear mixed-effects models; and implementation data using inductive thematic analysis of interviews, meeting minutes, observational field notes and study communication mapped to the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research.
Ethics and dissemination
Ethical approval was obtained from Children’s Health Queensland Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/2019/QCHQ/56290), The University of Queensland (2019002233) and Queensland University of Technology (1900000847). Dissemination will occur through stakeholder groups, scientific meetings and peer-reviewed publications.
Trial registration number
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12620000174987).
Keywords: paediatrics, change management, paediatric dermatology, telemedicine, organisation of health services
Strengths and limitations of this study.
New evidence of the effectiveness and implementation of electronic patient-reported outcome measures in the routine clinical care of children with skin conditions and their parents will be generated which has received limited attention.
Stakeholders representing multiple perspectives (children, parents, health professionals) were involved in the development of the intervention and process evaluation.
Lack of ability to mask participants to the outcomes and contamination of the control group are potential biases, although child and parent participants were masked to the hypotheses.
Introduction
The routine use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), or proxy-report measures, as part of routine clinical care has been identified as a means of driving change in healthcare systems, to ensure the unique voice of the patient is heard.1 2 Potential benefits are improvements in shared decision-making, communication with health professionals and adherence to recommended treatments.3 PROMs are defined as questionnaires completed by a patient with a health condition about their own health and treatment.
A recent systematic review identified that the effectiveness of PROM interventions for people with health conditions compared with usual care has been positive in adequately powered studies.4 Few trials have been conducted in children. Only 2 of 22 included randomised controlled trials were conducted in children, 1 focused on children with diabetes and 1 on children with cancer.5 6 Two more recent paediatric cluster randomised controlled trials investigated PROMs used with children with severe mental health conditions attending child and adolescent psychiatric services.7 8 Only one of the four paediatric trials identified positive effects of the PROM intervention. The positive effects were for psychosocial health-related quality of life but not physical health-related quality of life in children with diabetes.5
The implementation of PROMs in routine paediatric care has also recently been investigated in a systematic review, with increased identification and discussion around health-related quality of life reported, particularly in psychosocial and emotional domains, but with mixed results regarding the impact on the quality of care.9 Quality of care outcomes examined were satisfaction with treatment, referral rate and consultation length.
Implementation outcomes can be examined using an implementation science framework such as the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). This framework has been identified as a ‘good fit’ for examining the implementation of PROMs in health service organisations in a recent systematic review of reviews that can assist to determine factors that influence implementation,10 and understand how the intervention works (ie, the process by which behaviour change occurs).11 Multi-level influences on implementation can be examined through a focus on individual characteristics of patients, families and clinicians (eg, knowledge and beliefs about the intervention), as well as organisational and process factors (eg, engagement).12
This paper will report the protocol for a randomised controlled trial and implementation study to test the effectiveness and implementation outcomes of a PROM feedback intervention targeting health-related quality of life, in children with the life-altering skin conditions of burn scars and infantile haemangiomas (termed the PEDS-ePROM study, where PEDS refers to children). The intervention involves the delivery of graphical displays of information from electronic PROMs (ePROMs) in routine consultations to encourage communication about the areas displayed and support clinical decision-making. A comparison intervention involves the completion of ePROMs alone without any graphical display of information. The need for interventions to improve the health-related quality of life of these children is highlighted by the lower health-related quality of life of children with burn scars across multiple domains even years after the actual injury compared with children with cancer.13 At the time of publication, the intervention had been designed and the randomised controlled trial and implementation testing was underway with no findings yet available.
Aims and objectives
The primary effectiveness aim is to determine the short-term effectiveness of implementing ePROMs with graphical displays of result summaries, on overall health-related quality of life of children with life-altering skin conditions. Secondary aims will be to examine the effectiveness of the intervention for other health-related quality of life outcomes of children and parents, the number and type of referrals to health professionals and treatment satisfaction.
Hypotheses (effectiveness component)
The ePROM plus graphical display intervention will have a greater effect on overall health-related quality of life than the ePROM alone intervention, with a consistent direction and similar strength of effect across the clinics and conditions, supporting comparative effectiveness of the intervention.
The ePROM plus graphical display intervention will increase the number of psychosocial referrals to health professionals and increase parent proxy-reported satisfaction with treatment compared with the ePROM alone intervention.
Implementation outcomes
The primary aim is to determine the short-term acceptability and sustainability of implementing the interventions. The secondary aim is to determine the cost, fidelity and contextual factors related to implementation.
Methods and analysis
Development of the study design and intervention
The development of the PEDS-ePROM study and intervention was conducted from May 2019 to January 2020. We initiated preliminary discussion with clinicians in clinical areas to identify which measures were already being used routinely in practice. Systematic reviews and paediatric literature regarding the use of PROMs were also reviewed. Interview guides were developed to identify health outcomes that are meaningful and of high priority to children, their families and health professionals in the PROM intervention.14 The nine core questions from the International Society of Quality of Life user guide and the companion guide areas were addressed in the interviews.15 This development strategy using existing research and interviews with parent proxies and children has been identified as important to improve the engagement of children and young people such that fewer items are missed and responses accurately reflect their experiences and cognitive ability.16
Interviews were conducted with children with life-altering skin conditions, their parents and treating health professionals in two phases as part of the pre-implementation planning, with interview questions mapped to the CFIR. In the first phase the most appropriate outcomes and PROMs were identified. In the second phase the content validity of chosen PROMs and process evaluation outcomes were confirmed. Potential barriers and benefits to implementation were identified in both phases. For children with burn scars and their families, measures of health-related quality of life specific to scarring that included symptoms and treatment burden were prioritised based on conceptual work from the research team that identified these aspects as central components of health-related quality of life for this group.17 The design of the randomised controlled trial was based on systematic review findings that identified greater benefits when PROM results were provided to clinicians compared with when results were not provided to clinicians.4 Measures of the child’s health-related quality of life were completed using parent-proxy and child self-report. The age cut-off for child self-report of 8 years or older was chosen for several reasons: this cut-off was being used in clinical practice in the burn scar clinics in the study setting; the burn scar-specific measures chosen were developed based on this cut-off; and the experience of the clinical and research team had identified that younger children aged 5–8 years often had difficulty comprehending the concepts captured in health-related quality of life measures.18 The difficulty children aged 5–8 years may have completing PROMs of health-related quality of life aligns with the findings of other paediatric researchers who identified the strongest evidence was for the broad age range of 6–8 years as the youngest age children can meaningfully report on a patient-reported outcome.19
ePROM and graphical display intervention
The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory infant and generic scales20 21 measuring health-related quality of life were included as generic measures that were the same across the clinics and conditions. Condition-specific health-related quality of life measures were also included as these measures have been identified as being more responsive to change than generic measures.22 Condition-specific health-related quality of life measures selected were the Brisbane Burn Scar Impact Profile,17 18 The CARe parent scale,23 Hemangioma Family Burden questionnaire24 and Infantile Hemangioma Quality of Life Scale.25 Selected measures targeted children and their parents and a single item targeted siblings. An open-ended option was also available for child and parent participants to report their priorities for care. Only PROMs meeting the criteria of content validity supported by involvement of the target group in development were included with the exception of the treatment satisfaction item. Graphical displays of result summaries from the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) and condition-specific measures of health-related quality of life measure will be presented in consultations for children with skin conditions and their parents to treating clinicians. The components of the intervention are reported in table 1.
Table 1.
Clinic | Mode of administration | ePROM+graphical display (intervention group) | ePROM alone (comparison group) | Intervention period | ||||
Content duration frequency | Content duration frequency | |||||||
Burn scar clinic | Administered remotely using email or by a research occupational therapist in the clinic setting. PROM data collected electronically on a device at home or on an Apple iPad in the clinic. | PedsQL generic and infant scales BBSIP CARe scales |
Approx. 15 min for child and parent participants to complete ePROMs prior consultations. Up to 15 min to download, print and deliver ePROMs and graphical displays to consultations. |
Delivered in consultations up to 1×/month. Based on usual care likely to be delivered 2–3×. | ePROMs delivered and completed as per intervention group. No graphical summaries provided in consultations.† | Approximately 15 min for child and parent participants to complete ePROMs prior to each consultation. Up to 5 min to download, print and deliver ePROM. | As per intervention group | Baseline–6 months‡ |
Vascular clinic | As per burn scar clinic | PedsQL infant scales Hemangioma Family Burden questionnaire Infantile Haemangioma Quality-of-Life Instrument |
Approx. 10 min for parent participants to complete ePROMs prior to each consultation. Up to 10 min to download, print and deliver ePROMs and graphical displays to consultations. |
Delivered in consultations up to 1×/month. Based on usual care likely 1–2×.§ | ePROMs delivered and completed as per intervention group. No graphical summaries provided in consultations.† | Approximately 10 min for child and parent participants to complete ePROMs prior to each consultation. No printing required. | As per intervention group | Baseline–6 months‡ |
*Based on the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) guidelines.45
†Graphical summaries provided to child and parent participants and entered into medical records at the end of the study.
‡Post-baseline.
§Children with ulcerated haemangiomas may receive intervention more frequently.
BBSIP, Brisbane Burn Scar Impact Profile; ePROMs, electronic PROMs; PedsQL, Pediatric Evaluation of Quality of Life Inventory; PROM, patient-reported outcome measure.
Method for completing PROMs
Electronically delivered PROMs were identified as the best option for getting patients to complete the measures at home prior to consultations to reduce the burden of administration of measures and result summaries during busy clinics. The ePROMs will be administered via a weblink sent to parent participants in an email in the 3 days prior to their appointment. If the questionnaires are not completed via the weblink, child and parent participants will be offered a further opportunity to complete the questionnaires using an iPad prior to their consultation at the outpatient clinic while they are waiting for their consultation where possible. Parent proxy-report will continue throughout the study for any child who turns 8 years of age after first completion using parent proxy-report. Phone calls or text messages will be used to remind parent participants to complete the ePROMs. The ePROMs and graphical display of result summaries will be generated using the online survey software program Qualtrics26 and presented to treating health professionals immediately prior to appointments. Copies of the ePROMs and graphical displays of result summaries will be stored in medical records.
Context
The setting will be two outpatient clinics at a major metropolitan quaternary-level children’s hospital in Australia; a burns clinic and a vascular anomalies clinic. Parents (and their children with skin conditions if aged 8 years or older) will be consecutively approached and recruited, and the intervention delivered prior to and at these clinics. The catchment of the hospital includes inhabitants from rural, regional and metropolitan areas including those from surrounding islands. Recruitment commenced in January 2020. The first participant was randomised to receive the intervention in March 2020.
Research design
A hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation design will be used which blends evaluating intervention effectiveness and understanding implementation of the intervention simultaneously.27 Benefits of this design include reduced lag time for uptake of the results into routine clinical practice and understanding the barriers and benefits to implementation.27 A pragmatic two-arm randomised controlled trial will be conducted using block randomisation in random blocks of 4, 6 or 8 stratified by diagnostic group (ie, infantile haemangiomas, burn scars), with child participants as the unit of randomisation; and an embedded qualitative process evaluation involving interviews with clinicians, and child and parent participants. The randomisation sequence will be prepared by a statistician independent from the study and will be concealed using sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed envelopes with tamper proof tape prepared by a person independent from the study.
The randomised controlled trial arms will be: (1) ePROM completion plus graphical display of result summaries to clinicians (intervention group) versus; (2) ePROM completion alone without graphical display of result summaries to clinicians (comparison group).
Baseline PROM measurement will occur before randomisation. PROM measurement will occur prior to or at one or more hospital appointments over the following 6 months and follow-up measurement will occur at 3 months and 6 months post-baseline if these timepoints differ from data collection timepoints during consultations with health professionals. Child and parent participants will be masked to the hypotheses. A Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials flow diagram has been used to report the schedule for enrolment, interventions and evaluations for the effectiveness component of the study (figure 1).
The study design and evaluation plan have been informed by the CFIR. This framework covers the physical and social environment, values, individual motivation and capacity factors which are considered important for the intervention being tested and has been derived from 33 theories relating to implementation.28 This protocol paper has been prepared following the eHealth Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials guidelines.29
Participants
Participants for the effectiveness trial will be consecutively sampled. A previous study by the author team using this sampling in the study setting with the same population30 31 demonstrated representation of the burn scar study population.32 Participants for the implementation study component will be purposively sampled with representation of parents across both clinics, those who responded positively and negatively to the intervention, and children across different age-groups or their parents where possible.
Inclusion criteria
Children with burn scars and infantile haemangiomas, aged 0–16 years at the time of recruitment, who require ongoing management in the hospital setting, and their parents aged 18 years or older will be included. Ongoing management is defined as children who require one or more ongoing hospital consultations with clinicians at the study setting beyond baseline in the 6-month post-baseline intervention period for the prevention or management of skin conditions as determined by treating clinicians at baseline. Treating clinicians will also be asked to determine children’s ability to complete PROMs electronically based on their physical condition and knowledge of the family (ie, to determine if bilateral hand burns would prevent sufficient movement of their hands to use an iPad).
Exclusion criteria
Children and parents will not be eligible to participate if they are involved with child protection services and it is difficult to obtain consent, where circumstances interfere with the participant’s ability to give informed consent (ie, diminished understanding or comprehension), or where there is difficulty completing the PROMs due to difficulty speaking or understanding written English. Participants who have difficulty speaking or understanding written English will be excluded as it was difficult to anticipate in advance the languages that might be required for ePROMs due to the cultural diversity of patients seen in the setting; as multiple ePROMs were being administered (four with no or few translations available) with most not developed or tested using culturally diverse groups which is an important criteria for establishing cross-cultural validity;33 34 as funding was not available for purchasing available translations of up to US$500 per translation; and as the interventions were not developed with these people thus it was unclear whether the interventions would meet the needs of these potential participants.
Sample size estimate
The sample size was based on recruitment feasibility. A retrospective audit of child and parent participants of clinic attendees suggested at least 35 participants in each clinic can be recruited in the intervention period. In terms of the effectiveness randomised controlled trial, if outcome data are available for 70 participants overall, then with 80% power we will be able to detect an effect size for the difference between-arms of 0.68 SD units or greater for overall health-related quality of life at 6 months post-baseline (alpha=0.05). A between group difference of 0.68 is considered clinically meaningful at the individual level by expert clinicians, as a medium to large effect is regarded as offsetting the burden of completion of ePROMs to patients and families and supporting implementation routinely in clinics. To account for 20% attrition expected at 6-month follow-up based on a prior study with children and parents completing PROMs in the burns clinic setting,30 recruitment will continue until at least 88 participants have been randomised to groups. The sample size estimate was based on all participants with data available including parent proxy and child report data. A recent systematic review of health-related quality of life in children with burns identified that parent-proxy and child self-ratings were generally comparable based on generic and burn specific measures.35 This findings is supported by an additional two trials examining burn scar specific health-related quality of life in the burn scar clinic in this study which were not included in the systematic review.30 31 These trials identified similar health-related quality of life scores using proxy and child report and for children aged less than 8 years and older than 8 years.
Interviews will be conducted with the following groups during implementation with numbers of participants represented approximately equally for each clinic: children with a skin condition, their parents and treating health professionals. Interviews will continue until saturation (ie, the point at which no further dimensions, nuances or insights of issues are identified)36 building on interview data generated pre-implementation. A greater number of child interviews will be required than parent and health professional interviews based on our previous experience of generally obtaining shorter interviews of 15–20 min in children with burn scars than with parents and health professionals.
Evaluation
Effectiveness outcomes
Study outcome measures will be self-completed by children aged 8 years or older and proxy-completed by parents for younger children. The primary outcome assessed will be change in the child’s generic overall health across both clinics measured using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL 4.0 Generic Core and Infant Scales proxy-report total score).20 21 Secondary outcomes will be: (1) change in the child’s psychosocial and physical health across both clinics measured using respective subscales of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL); (2) change in the child’s generic health across both clinics measured using individual items of the Child Health Utility (CHU-9D) and utility score;37 (3) condition-specific health-related quality of life of the child (overall impact, sensory intensity, sensory frequency, sensory impact, mobility, daily living, friendships and social interaction, appearance, emotional reactions, and physical symptoms) measured using respective subscales of the Brisbane Burn Scar Impact Profile (burn scar clinic group only); (4) condition-specific health-related quality of life of parents (worry and impact) measured using respective subscales of the Brisbane Burn Scar Impact Profile (burn scar clinic group only); (5) condition-specific health-related quality of life of the parent (psychosocial functioning, negative mood and self-worth) measured using the respective subscales of the CARe parent questionnaire (burn scar clinic group only); (6) condition-specific health-related quality of life of the child (physical symptoms, social interactions, emotional functioning, psychosocial functioning) measured using respective subscales of the Infantile Hemangioma Quality of Life Scale (infantile haemangioma vascular clinic group only); (7) condition-specific health-related quality of life of parents (relationship and work, budget) measured using the relationships and work dimension and single budget item of the Hemangioma Family Burden questionnaire; (8) parent overall satisfaction with treatment; (9) number and type of referrals for the child and parent. Parent overall satisfaction with treatment was measured based on the finding that significantly more intervention patients reported satisfaction with overall care in a study of children with diabetes, which was the only paediatric study that examined this outcome in a recent systematic review.4 The number and type of referrals was included as an outcome based on the findings of three paediatric studies identified in a recent systematic review, in which two studies reported an increase in the referral rates in the intervention group, and one study identified no difference in referral rates between the intervention and control groups.9 A description of each of the outcomes and psychometric properties of outcomes are reported in online supplemental file 1. Adverse effects of the PROM interventions will be monitored using the self-report of parent and child participants (where appropriate), treating health professionals as well as by monitoring of the PROM data by investigators.
bmjopen-2020-041861supp001.pdf (122.6KB, pdf)
Other outcomes
Sociodemographic data collected from or about parents will include the parent’s relationship to the child, level of education, ethnicity, work status, household income and postcode; and from children aged 8 years or older or parents about their children will include, gender, ethnicity, education level, scar location and comorbidities of the child participants. Clinical data collected from electronic medical records will be per cent total body surface area burned, percent full thickness burn, length of time post-burn, type of healing (eg, spontaneous skin healing vs split thickness graft), type of burn; and length of time to re-epithelialisation, medications and complications during the study period.
Effectiveness evaluation
Descriptive statistics will be used to report the characteristics of the sample. The number of participants excluded based on the exclusion criteria will also be reported (eg, difficulty speaking English). An intention to treat analysis will be the primary approach but per protocol analyses will be compared with the intention to treat approach to examine the effect of those who didn’t receive the intervention as intended. The key sociodemographic and clinical characteristic data that will be examined for baseline differences between the groups will be age, gender, education, household income, socioeconomic status of the neighbourhood where the family reside based on postcode, severity of baseline symptoms and health-related quality of life, body location of the condition, visibility of the condition (scars on the head, neck, face or hands) and time since the skin condition commenced or injury occurred. Baseline differences in informant (parent proxy and child self-report) will also be examined between the groups.
Effectiveness analysis
Primary outcome comparison at 6-months post-baseline will be based on overall health from the Pediatric Evaluation of Quality of Life Inventory between the intervention and comparison group using linear mixed-effects models that account for repeated observations from the same child and clustering within clinics and within treating health professionals. Covariables will be included for potentially confounding variables if any differences between groups are identified for key sociodemographic, and clinical characteristics at baseline. The analysis population will consist of all participants who have analysable data. To investigate possible effects of informant, age and gender, a prespecified subgroup analyses of the primary and secondary health-related quality of life outcomes will be stratified by informant (proxy vs child report), child age (0–24 months vs 2–8 years vs 8+ years; except for CHU-9D which will be 3–8 years vs 8+ years) and gender (male vs female) to determine whether effect differences exist based on these factors. A sensitivity analysis will be conducted to compare the results of the parent proxy versus child self-report where available.
A sensitivity analysis will also be conducted using imputation techniques to replace non-ignorable data that is considered to be missing at random over the follow-up period, to determine whether bias is likely in the complete case analysis. A further sensitivity analysis will investigate the possibility of imbalance in severity of health-related quality of life in the two clinics at baseline. As well as reporting the results for generic health-related quality of life across the clinics, we will also report after stratifying by clinic. Secondary outcome comparisons will be conducted at 6-months post-baseline using linear mixed-effects models where appropriate. Multi-level or nested hierarchical analysis will examine the effect of clinic and treating health professional effects by examining patient clustering within clinics, and surgeons and occupational therapists clustered within clinics. The amount and type of missing data will be reported using descriptive statistics. The maximum potential effect of the intervention with children will be analysed according to the treatment actually received (an ‘as treated’ analysis incorporating treatment dose received). Data analysis will be conducted using Stata V.16.0 (Statacorp).
Implementation outcomes
Implementation will be considered successful if graphical displays of result summaries are presented to treating clinicians immediately prior to more than 85% of consultations where a patient is randomised to receive a report, and if PROMs and summaries are filed in electronic medical records for more than 75% of patients eligible to have PROM data provided to treating clinicians in the intervention period. The implementation outcomes of acceptability and sustainability38 will be used to determine the overall success of the implementation. The implementation outcomes of acceptability, sustainability, cost, fidelity and contextual factors are detailed in table 2.
Table 2.
Outcome | Detailed description of the outcome | Data type, source and analysis |
Acceptability of the interventions and evaluation* | The acceptability of the ePROM interventions and evaluation by families of children with health conditions and treating clinicians including content, complexity, delivery and relative advantage38 and reflecting and evaluating (including the ability to meet needs of people who have difficulty speaking or understanding written English in the future).*
|
Quantitative: electronic study data and administrative data; descriptive analysis. Qualitative: interview and field note data; thematic analysis including mapping to CFIR innovation constructs (eg, relative advantage, adaptability, complexity, cost in the pre-implementation and implementation stages; and reflecting and evaluating, design quality and packaging, compatibility, and relative priority in the implementation phase). |
Sustainability of ePROM interventions and evaluation | The extent to which the ePROM intervention (or a modification of the intervention) was continued or planned to be continued in routine clinical practice at the end of the study, and barriers and facilitators of sustained use. | Qualitative: interviews with child, parent and health professional participants and field notes; analysed using thematic analysis and mapping to CFIR (eg, knowledge and beliefs about the intervention, design quality and packaging, needs and resources). |
Cost | The cost of implementing the intervention for patients in the intervention and control groups based on resource use from the perspective of the health service. Data for healthcare resource utilisation for cointerventions for skin treatment (eg, medicines, complementary treatments), and details of hospital presentations, will be included. |
Qualitative: interview data relating to cost. Quantitative: study and administrative data, medical records, hospital clinical costings department data. |
Fidelity | The extent to which the interventions were delivered and received as intended.
|
Qualitative: verbal fidelity reports and interviews with children and parents, and interviews with health professional participants and field notes. Quantitative: study data, descriptive analysis. |
Contextual factors | Barriers and facilitators to multi-level implementation of the intervention and the evaluation; at the individual level, clinic level, hospital level and outside the hospital setting. | Qualitative: interviews with child, parent and health professional participants; and field notes analysed using thematic analysis and mapping to CFIR (eg, culture, networks and communication, implementation cost). |
*Children ≥8 years will self-report; parents will provide proxy-reports for children aged <8 years except for satisfaction with treatment which will only be self-reported by parents.
CFIR, Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research; ePROMs, electronic PROMs; PROMs, patient-reported outcome measures.
Implementation evaluation
Implementation outcomes will be evaluated using interviews; health service, administrative, clinical costings and missing data; observational field notes of meetings and each clinic attended or planned; meeting minutes and study emails; and fidelity reports. Acceptability is defined as the perception among stakeholders that a treatment, service, practice or innovation is agreeable or satisfactory.38 Sustainability is defined as the extent that a newly implemented treatment is maintained within a service setting’s ongoing, stable operations.38 The ways in which the needs of people with difficulty speaking or understanding written English can best be addressed in the future will be explored in interviews as part of understanding acceptability and sustainability, as these groups were excluded from participation. The data from these sources will be mapped to the CFIR.28 This framework can be used to understand barriers and facilitators to implementing the intervention at the individual level, the organisational level and settings external to the organisation which can assist in determining the sustainability and potential scaling up of the intervention.28 Factors related to implementation delivery that might have impacted on the intervention effectiveness will also be examined to understand whether and how the expected outcomes were achieved, and the reasons for this.
Fidelity of the intervention will be taken from study records kept by researchers. Immediately after face-to-face consultations parents and children (where appropriate) will be requested to verbally report the graphical display topics that were discussed during the consultation in the intervention group.
Implementation analysis
Interpretive description39 will be used to thematically analyse the data. This qualitative analysis uses elements from several other qualitative methodologies including phenomenology, grounded theory and ethnography without focusing on any specific technique.39 Interpretive description is ideal for applied clinical questions and analysis of a wide range of data sources.39 The analysis builds on what is known in terms of current practices and structures of health services and what is known and not known.39 Data analysis will be conducted iteratively, concurrently with interviews, with analysis conducted during the implementation phase building on analysis of pre-implementation interviews. Framework analysis40 will then be applied deductively, mapping the qualitative and quantitative data (eg, verbatim quotes and descriptive statistics) to the predefined key constructs of the CFIR as overarching themes. The data will be organised into a framework matrix where columns are codes and rows are participants.40 This analysis is conducted across participants as well as within participants. Steps in framework analysis include familiarisation; indexing; charting and synthesising.40 Pre-implementation and post-implementation differences will be examined, and themes that emerge in addition to the CFIR constructs, will be added to the framework. Positive and negative participant quotes and descriptive data will be examined separately for each construct in the framework to determine influences on implementation and the strength of each construct, for each clinics as well as across clinics.41 Once mapping to the CFIR has been completed, data that applies to the implementation outcomes of acceptability, sustainability, fidelity and contextual factors will then be summarised.
Interviews will be audio recorded and transcribed verbatim by study personnel. Recordings will be stored in a coded form on a secure password protected folder within The University of Queensland until coding has been completed, accessible to two of the investigators and a research assistant. The credibility of the analysis will be checked using member checking of the interview data, independent coding of the data by two researchers of at least 20% of the data, triangulation of the results across participant groups (managers, treating health professionals, parent and child participants) and using field notes, and reflective journaling. Microsoft Excel (V.16, Microsoft Corporation) and NVivo (V.10, QSR International, Doncaster, Victoria, Australia42) will be used to organise and code the data.
Electronic platform
The electronic survey platform Qualtrics26 was chosen to administer the PROMs and to provide graphical displays of result summaries based on visual aesthetics of the graphical displays compared with other survey programmes and prior experience of the investigators using the programme. Features of the programme that were important for administration of the chosen surveys and study design were the ability to have open-ended text, email distribution, ability to send reminders, display longitudinal responses, a recoding values function, automated scoring functionality and links to NVivo software42 for coding open text responses.
Patient and public involvement
Children aged 8 years and older with life-altering skin conditions, parents of children with life-altering skin conditions and treating health professionals in the study setting were involved in all study phases including development of the intervention, process evaluation, study design and implementation evaluation. These stakeholder groups reported on the burden of the planned intervention, potential time required to participate and acceptability of follow-up intervals in pre-implementation interviews. Plans include forming a stakeholder reference group to inform the interpretation and sustainability of the study findings.
Discussion
To our knowledge studies of PROM interventions have not previously focused on children with life-altering skin conditions. A pragmatic approach has been taken to maximise relevance to the clinical context including limiting exclusion criteria, and developing and delivering an intervention that has limited interference with the running of very busy outpatient clinics. If the intervention is shown to have promising short-term results then secondary prevention impacts particularly on the emotional health of parents may be likely and the benefits higher in the longer term which will be examined in the future.
An outcome of the proposed study may be refinement of the intervention based on mapping to the CFIR which may identify additional elements that should be considered. The findings will also likely inform the design of a multisite cluster effectiveness-implementation study of a patient-reported outcome measure intervention in these children which may reduce the risk of contamination bias.8 Information obtained will inform ongoing efforts in paediatric care to use PROMs as part of routine clinical care.
Strengths and limitations
Strengths of the study include the involvement of stakeholders representing multiple perspectives (children, parents, health professionals) in the development of the intervention and the process evaluation, and the focus of the intervention and process evaluation on health-related quality of life. The use of the CFIR is also a strength. Theory-based interventions tend to be more effective than non-theory based interventions.43
More specifically, the current study will seek to understand how the inner setting of the organisation (ie, organisational culture and structural characteristics) impacts on implementation which has been identified as a research gap.10
The lack of masking of treating health professionals and participants in the randomised controlled trial is a limitation although masking is not possible as the outcomes are patient or proxy-reported and it will be clear to most participants when results are presented in consultations. However, child and parent participants will be masked to the hypotheses. Potential contamination bias has also been raised as a possibility in trials of this nature where several clinics within a facility are included, as treating health professionals’ awareness of issues that should be focused on may be raised, diluting the impact of the intervention.44
A limitation is the lack of inclusion of children and parents who have difficulty speaking or understanding English. Further attention is required to develop and test ePROM interventions for families from specific cultural backgrounds which is a challenge in the study setting where people from diverse cultural backgrounds are seen. Specifically, people of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander descent were not involved in the development process thus the intervention and study design may not be acceptable for this group of people and should be established.
Ethics and dissemination
Ethical approval has been received from Children’s Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC/19/QCHQ/56290), The University of Queensland (2019002233) and Queensland University of Technology (1900000847). Written consent will be obtained from parent and treating health professional participants once written and verbal information has been provided. Parents will be encouraged to discuss the study with children who can communicate with their parents prior to consent being obtained. Adverse effects will be reported to the Children’s Health Queensland Hospital and Health Service and Human Research Ethics Committees.
Supplementary Material
Footnotes
Twitter: @tyack_z, @GillHar26
Contributors: ZT designed the study with input from SMM and RSW for the effectiveness evaluation, GH for the implementation evaluation and RMK and MS for integrating with existing clinical processes. ZT drafted the protocol and SMM, MS, TZ, RSW and RMK critically revised the manuscript.
Funding: This work was supported by a Health Services Research grant from the Children’s Hospital Foundation, Brisbane, grant number 50297. The funder had no input into the design or conduct of the study.
Competing interests: ZT, MS and RMK developed the Brisbane Burn Scar Impact Profile which was included as a scar-specific measure in this study. MS and RMK were clinical staff members of the health service where the study will be conducted at the time of submission.
Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Supplemental material: This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.
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Supplementary Materials
bmjopen-2020-041861supp001.pdf (122.6KB, pdf)