FACE for Children With Rare Diseases (FACE-Rare)
Rare Diseases
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Rare Diseases focused on measuring palliative care, psychosocial interventions, rare diseases, family interventions, family-centered care, patient-centered care, pediatrics, adolescent, end-of-life care, public health, mental health, spirituality, children with rare diseases, behavioral interventions, decisional burden, role stress, family caregiver, person-centered care, chronic conditions, complex health needs, caregiver burden, respecting choices, evidence-based practice, randomized clinical trial (RCT), anxiety
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Child inclusion criteria are
- ≥1.0 years and <18.0 years at enrollment;e
- unable to participate in end-of-life care decision-making;
- have a rare disease as operationally defined (See Human Subjects);
- not under a Do Not Resuscitate Order or Allow a Natural Death Order; and
- not in the Intensive Care Unit.
Family caregiver inclusion criteria are:
- ≥ 18.0 years at enrollment;
- legal guardian of child and child's caregiver;
- can speak and understand English; and
- not known to be developmentally delayed.
Exclusion Criteria:
(1) Family caregiver is actively homicidal, suicidal, or psychotic at the time of enrollment.
Sites / Locations
- Children's National Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
FACE-Rare Intervention
Treatment-as-Usual (TAU) Control
FACE-Rare is a behavioral intervention that combines the CSNAT Pediatric Approach and the Respecting Choices® Next Steps ACP over 3 sessions. Sessions 1&2: CSNAT is an evidence-based process of family caregiver assessment and support in specialized medical (palliative) care. The CSNAT tool is structured around 16 categories of family caregiver support. With the goal to decrease caregiver burden, this process consists of 5 stages wherein a nurse or practitioner works with the caregiver to create a shared support plan for the child. Session 3: Respecting Choices® Next Steps- This advanced care planning (pACP) conversation engages families in a process for how to make future medical decisions consistent with their goals and values. The interview is structured in 6 stages to achieve 2 main goals: to facilitate conversations with the family about their child's medical condition, history, fears, values, beliefs, and hopes; and to set the stage for the family's future healthcare decisions.
To minimize the burden to families, we have chosen a Treatment-as-Usual (TAU) comparison condition, where patients will receive their normal standard of care. Both study arms will receive palliative (specialized medical) care information at enrollment and complete questionnaires before and after the intervention or TAU period. Current practice for minors with life-limiting illnesses is to defer initial discussions of advanced care planning (pACP) until a medical crisis, so this is what the TAU control arm condition will consist of.