Digital Health (Dec 2023)

Protocol for a multi-phase, multi-center, real-world, hybrid effectiveness–implementation study of a digital intervention for pediatric chronic pain co-designed with patients (Digital SPA)

  • Rocío de la Vega,
  • Elena R. Serrano-Ibáñez,
  • Gema T. Ruiz-Párraga,
  • Tonya M. Palermo,
  • Rikard Wicksell,
  • Eduardo Fernández-Jiménez,
  • Silvia Oliva,
  • Susana Roldán,
  • Laura Monfort,
  • María José Peláez,
  • Moisés Leyva Carmona,
  • Carmen Ramírez-Maestre,
  • Alicia E. López-Martínez,
  • Jordi Miró,
  • Rosa Esteve

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/20552076231219490
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Background Children and adolescents with chronic pain are a vulnerable population who often lack the resources to manage their condition. Due to high personal, social, and economic consequences, proper management in its early stages is key to reducing disability. The aim of this project is to co-develop a digital intervention for pediatric chronic pain (Digital SPA) with end-users and to evaluate its effectiveness and implementation outcomes in Spain. Methods (Phase 1) Focus groups with patients, parents, and clinicians ( n = 5–6 each) will inform about unmet pain care needs and provide a starting point for co-designing the intervention. (Phase 2) Content creation and usability testing will be based on the results of Phase 1, and the theory-driven development will follow the latest available evidence. The intervention will use validated psychological techniques focused on improving functioning by teaching pain coping skills. (Phase 3) Hybrid effectiveness–implementation trial. Participants ( n = 195) will be adolescents aged 12–17 years old with chronic pain and one of their parents. Assessments include physical function, pain, sleep, anxiety, mood, satisfaction and adherence to the treatment, and number of visits to the emergency room. A qualitative framework analysis will be conducted with data from Phase 1. Effects of the intervention will be evaluated using linear multilevel modeling. The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) and Behavioral Interventions Using Technology (BIT) frameworks will be used to evaluate implementation. Discussion This study is expected to produce a co-created evidence-based digital intervention for pediatric chronic pain and a roadmap for successful implementation. Trial registration number (TRN) and date of registration ClinicalTrials.gov (registered on 26 June 2023: https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05917626 ). Contributions to the literature The implementation of digital health interventions has two major gaps: (1) adherence to treatment is suboptimal, and (2) the process of making the interventions available to the end-user in a sustainable way is often unsuccessful. In this study, we expect that assessing users’ needs and co-designing an intervention with them will improve adherence. Documenting the implementation process from the project inception and integrating the results into an implementation framework will allow for replication and extension in different contexts. This study will increase the knowledge about implementation in a vulnerable population: adolescents with chronic pain without access to in-person multidisciplinary pain care.