Effectiveness of Family-Professional Collaboration on Functional Goals Achievement of Children With Cerebral Palsy and Caregivers' Quality of Life and Burden
Cerebral Palsy, Collaborative Intervention Process, Functional Goals Achievement
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Cerebral Palsy focused on measuring Family-professional collaboration, partnerships, children's performance, quality of life, burden, caregivers, physical therapists
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Physical therapists with at least one year of experience in pediatric physical therapy. Children with CP, aged between 2 to 12 years, Gross Motor Function Classification System (GMFCS) level I, II, and III, and attended the physical therapy sessions accompanied by their caregivers. Exclusion Criteria: Physical therapists in the experimental group who rate their level of confidence to implement the collaborative strategies less than 4 out of 5. children who underwent recent surgery (6 months) or after Botulinum toxin injection treatment (3 months), had uncontrolled seizure disorder, or discontinued physical therapy sessions.
Sites / Locations
- King Saud University
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
family-professional collaboration practice model
conventional therapy
Physical therapists in the family-professional collaboration practice model group will receive instructions in the collaborative intervention, following the process and the strategies of the family-professional collaboration practice model to enhance the collaboration during physical therapy sessions. The instruction conducted online in two sessions for six hours (3 hours per session). the therapists in this group will treat the children according to steps of family-professional collaboration practice model: Step 1: Mutually agreed-upon goals, Step 2: shared planning, Step 3:Shared implementation, and Step 4: Shared evaluation of child and family outcomes.
Physical therapists in the conventional therapy group will not receive any instructions related to the collaborative intervention process. the therapists in this group will treat the children as conventional therapy