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Improving Activity in Individuals With Cerebral Palsy
Sponsor: Father Flanagan's Boys' Home
Summary
Individuals with cerebral palsy are known to have a reduced amount of physical activity; yet, there are no known intervention strategies for improving the number of steps they take each day. This study will use wearable physical activity monitors to assess if behavioral coaching is a viable strategy for combating the reduced physical activity seen in this patient population.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
11 Years - 45 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
32
Start Date
2025-03-01
Completion Date
2029-03-01
Last Updated
2025-09-29
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Motivational Interviewing
The participants will meet with the research staff three times a week during the eight weeks of wearing the activity monitor via video or Webex call with a duration ideally not exceeding one hour. All staff involved in these coaching sessions have been MINT trained and certified and have mastered the skills of motivational interviewing. Their goal will be to discuss with the participant about how successful they have been or not been in increasing their daily step count and movement and discussing the barriers preventing them from achieving that goal. Open-ended questions, affirmations, reflections, summaries, balancing change and sustain talk, and eliciting change behavior will all be used accordingly during the sessions. Coaching is tied to the overall results in investigating if motivational interviewing and coaching are effective in increasing movement in populations with cerebral palsy.
Locations (1)
Boys Town National Research Hospital
Boys Town, Nebraska, United States