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Family Bridge Program
Sponsor: Seattle Children's Hospital
Summary
Pediatric healthcare disparities in the United States (US) remain persistent and pervasive. Suboptimal patient-provider communication plays an important role in creating and maintaining disparate outcomes; this is compounded by mismatches between a family's skills and resources and the complexity of the health system (such as health literacy and system navigation). Few interventions exist to address disparities related to communication and system navigation in the inpatient setting; given the established links between these and disparate clinical outcomes, such interventions are needed. To address this gap, the study team collaborated with parents/caregivers, staff, and providers to develop and pilot-test a novel program to improve navigation ability, communication, and hospital-to-home transition for a diverse population of children and their families, The Family Bridge Program (FBP). The FBP combines principles of effective patient navigation and communication coaching interventions into a brief and targeted inpatient program. It is designed for a broad population of low-income children, is not disease-specific, is not limited to English proficient families, and is less time-intensive than traditional navigation, to enable provision of support to more families. The FBP, delivered in-person by a trained lay navigator, includes: (1) hospital orientation; (2) unmet social needs screening (e.g., food insecurity); (3) parent communication and cultural preference assessment, relayed to the medical team; (4) communication coaching for parents; (5) emotional support; (6) assistance with care coordination and logistics; and (7) a phone call 2 days post-discharge. Program elements are flexibly delivered based on parent need and interest. In pilot testing, the program was feasible to deliver, acceptable to parents and providers, and significantly improved parent-reported system navigation ability. The current R01 proposes a two-site randomized controlled trial (RCT) of the effectiveness of FBP among 728 families of low-income children from families who identify as Hispanic, Black, Asian, Native American/Alaska Native, or Pacific Islander. Enrolled families will be randomized 1:1 (stratified by site and language) to FBP or usual care plus written resources. The specific aims of this clinical trial are to (1) Test the effect of the FBP on parent-reported system navigation ability, quality of hospital-to-home transition, diagnosis comprehension, observed communication quality, perceived stress and revisits; (2) Examine whether changes in parent-reported barriers and needs mediate program effects; and (3) Identify subgroups of parents among whom the FBP is more effective. The proposed RCT will use a rigorous design to test a feasible, innovative program to address a critical national problem. If effective, the Family Bridge Program would provide a scalable model for improving health care experiences and outcomes for families of low-income children at risk for disparities, including those who prefer a language other than English for their medical care.
Official title: Family Bridge Program Randomized Controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
728
Start Date
2024-05-07
Completion Date
2026-10-31
Last Updated
2026-02-03
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Family Bridge Program
The Family Bridge Program consists of 7 components, delivered by a trained lay navigator, the Guide. The program includes: (1) orientation to the hospital, unit, room, and hospital resources (e.g., toiletries, loaner phone chargers); (2)unmet social needs assessment, followed by connection to appropriate resources (e.g., food vouchers, community-based transportation); (3)communication and cultural preference assessment (eg, preferred language, comfort asking questions, and health-related cultural beliefs), which is communicated to the medical team and documented in the electronic health record;(4)communication coaching for parents/caregivers to help them clarify and practice asking questions of the medical team; (5)emotional support via daily check-ins during the hospital stay; (6)assistance with logistics ; and (7)one follow-up phone call, 2 days post-discharge, to address remaining questions and connect families to ongoing services if needed.
Care as usual - resources only
Families randomized to the control arm will receive FBP written resources, which the Guide (and interpreter, as needed) will review with them over \~5-15 minutes one time. This includes information on hospital services (e.g., cafeteria coupons), community resources (e.g., food and housing support), the structure and roles of the medical team, and the daily hospital schedule. Parents will be informed that their child's nurse is available to help them.
Locations (2)
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Seattle Children's
Seattle, Washington, United States