MedPath

Developing an Injury Prevention Simulation Game to Better Engage Parents in Services -Home Safety Hero

Not Applicable
Conditions
Parenting
Interventions
Behavioral: Home Safety Hero Computer Game
Registration Number
NCT03965377
Lead Sponsor
Penn State University
Brief Summary

This study will test the effectiveness of novel technology-based game to teach parents and parents to be home safety skills. These include the identification of home child injury risks under two conditions (with and without distraction) and how to resolve these risks to better protect preschool children from injuries. Few empirically validated home safety interventions exist and the best ones involve individual home visitors. These and others that use didactic instruction or provision of written material have poor response from low socioeconomic parents who are less literate and more resistant to outsiders entering their homes. The use of a computer game to provide education in this area is being tested for effectiveness and the game's engagement will also be examined.

Given cognitive problems in parents have been linked in the PI's work to child neglect (e.g., poor child supervision), links of performance on the game to cognitive capacities will also be examined in a preliminary way.

Detailed Description

The study will compare a group of parents and parents to be who play the game multiple times (n=15) to a wait list group (n=15) who just play it once. The study will examine reaction times to identification and resolution of the risks overall and by category of risk (e.g., poisoning, burns, suffocation, etc.). The study will also examine failures on levels of the game which are graded for difficulty. The game was designed for low failure rate to increase engagement and to improve motivation.

Changes in the participants' perception of efficacy in preventing injuries to children and their engagement with the game (using a standardized usability survey) will be examined. The study will also examine the role of experience with the use of technology and cognitive capacities in relation to performance and pre-post changes with multiple plays of the game.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria

participants who are parents or parents to be from a high school program in Altoona, PA. For those less than age 18, parental permission for participation is required

Exclusion Criteria

non-English Speaking; ones whose due date falls in the study period and who are not likely to complete the project.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Home Safety Hero game playHome Safety Hero Computer GameHome Safety Hero is parental psychoeducational computer game to prevent childhood injuries
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Learningone week (four plays of the game) The outcomes average seconds until identification will be examined across the four game plays and also can be examined for each of four plays of the game.

The game is designed to improve speed of identifying home safety hazards with and without distractions and also identify effective resolutions of the risks. Speed in identification is measured in seconds. Effectiveness in identifying resolutions is measured in seconds as well (e.g., seconds til correct response). Average time to identification of risks in each of the three phases of the game can be computed (Identification Phase, Resolution Phase, and Distraction Phase). The game will also give whether the resolutions selected are correct and thus, a percentage of correct resolutions can be computed for the entire resolution phase.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
:Perception of efficacy in preventing childhood injuries: PARENT SENSE OF INJURY COMPETENCE SCALEpre and one week later This outcome will be measured using PARENT SENSE OF INJURY COMPETENCE SCALE. This instrument has 16 items that are rated on a 1-6 scale with 6 indicating greater efficacy. The items are totaled for overall efficacy perception.

The participants' change in perception of efficacy in preventing childhood injuries

Engagement in the gameThis instrument is collected one time at post test once they have completed game play. The time frame is one week after entering the study.

A survey instrument \[Usability Survey (UES)\] will be collected that measures engagement in the game. This instrument has 26 items that assess engagement with the game rated on a five point scale from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). The ratings are totalled for an overall engagement score and this will be used to measure engagement.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Sandra T. Azar

🇺🇸

University Park, Pennsylvania, United States

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath