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Nurse-led Transitional Care to Improve Symptom Management in Childhood Cancer Survivors
Sponsor: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Summary
This study aims to evaluate the feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of a nurse-facilitated interdisciplinary transitional care programme, based on the Omaha system, for Chinese childhood cancer survivors (CCSs) and their parents in Hong Kong. Investigators will conduct a two-arm, randomized waitlist-controlled trial at the Hong Kong Children's Hospital, the only local center for CCS follow-up. Sixty-eight dyads (CCS aged 13-18 and a parent) will be randomized to either the 12-week nurse-led intervention or usual care. The intervention includes an initial face-to-face assessment and regular follow-ups via Zoom, focusing on symptom management, health education, and self-care empowerment, with referrals to other professionals as needed. The control group receives standard discharge care and educational materials, and will be offered the intervention after data collection. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, and 3 and 6 months post-intervention, including symptom management, quality of life, caregiver burden, self-efficacy, and emergency department visits. Feasibility will be evaluated by recruitment, retention, attendance, and data completeness rates. If effective, this programme could improve transitional care and symptom management for CCSs and their families, and inform clinical practice and policy in Hong Kong and beyond.
Official title: A Nurse-facilitated Interdisciplinary Transitional Care Programme for Childhood Cancer Survivors and Their Parents to Improve Symptom Management: a Feasibility Randomised Waitlist-controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
13 Years - 18 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
68
Start Date
2026-07-01
Completion Date
2028-06-30
Last Updated
2025-12-09
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Counseling based on Omaha system
Investigators developed the intervention based on the Omaha system and investigators' previous studies. The intervention will last for 12 weeks. During week 1, dyads (a pairing of a child with their parent) will have a 1-hour face-to-face consultation with a RN. The RN will assess every dyad using the Omaha system to identify any problems. The Omaha system covers 42 problems grouped into 4 categories, including environmental, physiological, psychosocial and health-related behaviours. After identifying the problems, the RN will deliver corresponding interventions according to the intervention scheme in the Omaha system. Subsequent follow-up will be provided by the RN via zoom during weeks 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 to evaluate their progress in terms of knowledge, behaviour and status using the rating scale in the Omaha system. The RN will assign further interventions, based on the Omaha system, to address their specific needs. Each follow-up should last around 30 minutes.
Usual Care
Dyads in this group will receive usual care, defined as the existing care practices provided by the hospital, which include a discharge checklist and educational materials regarding the care. After the completion of data collection for all timepoints, they will be invited to join the counselling based on Omaha system intervention.