Study of the Impact of a Pediatric Nurse's Consultation on Parental Anxiety During a Febrile Convulsion in Children
- Conditions
- Febrile Seizure
- Interventions
- Other: Standard careOther: CONSULFE consultation
- Registration Number
- NCT05947006
- Lead Sponsor
- University Hospital, Toulouse
- Brief Summary
Febrile seizures are considered a very common syndrome presented in the pediatric emergency room. Witnessing these seizures may can cause anxiety in parents and generate them psychological sequelae such as major depressive disorder in the short term, or sleep disorders in the long term.
An appropriate care for parents must be put in place in the emergency department, with the objective of improving their knowledge of this pathology and its care, and thus to reduce their anxiety and prevent potential inappropriate or even deleterious behavior and maneuvers towards the child.
- Detailed Description
Febrile seizures occupy a large place in pediatric practice in the emergency room, their prevalence varies between 3 and 8% in children under 7 years old, hence the notion of a very common syndrome.
When parents witness this event, they can experience it as terrifying, and which can alone cause anxiety and generate psychological sequelae. In the literature, it is described that a third of the parents present a major depressive disorder after the event and a third of the parents still describe sleep disorders after one year.
After the arrival at the pediatric emergency room following the febrile seizure, the priority is given to the care of the child and parents are given succinct medical information. Due to parental anxiety, which may still be significant at this time, this information may not be understood. All of this can make the parent's level of knowledge about this pathology and its management low, potentially leading to future behaviors and maneuvers (such as shaking) that are inappropriate or even harmful to the child.
A different course with appropriate care for parents must be put in place in the emergency department, with the objective of improving their knowledge of this pathology, its care and to reduce parent's anxiety. This is why the CONSULFE childcare consultation is proposed in this research.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 70
- Participant being an adult parent who attended the febrile seizure of their child aged 1 to 5, episode lasting less than 15 minutes occurring within 24 hours
- Participant having signed the free and informed consent
- Affiliation to a social security scheme
- Parent who already has experience of febrile seizures in one of the siblings
- Parent of a child with a convulsive or neurological history
- Non-French speaking parents
- Parent with a diagnosed psychiatric illness
- Parent benefiting from a legal protection measure
- Parent participating in a study related to the management of anxiety
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Standard care Standard care Patients in this arm will receive the standard care stablished in the emergency room after a febrile seizure CONSULFE Consultation CONSULFE consultation Patients in this arm will receive a consultation managed by the pediatric nurse (CONSULFE)
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Level of anxiety Baseline and 6 hours after the intervention Change in the level of anxiety felt at the beginning and at the end of the visit to the emergency room by parents during standard treatment vs parents following the CONSULFE consultation. The level of anxiety is measured with the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), with a minimum value of 20, meaning no or low anxiety, and a maximum value of 80, meaning high anxiety.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Parent's level of anxiety at the departure of the emergency room 6 hours after the intervention Level of anxiety measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), with a minimum value of 20, meaning no or low anxiety, and a maximum value of 80, meaning high anxiety.
Satisfaction of parents with intervention 6 hours after the intervention Satisfaction with the intervention will be measured using a satisfaction questionnaire with values between 1 and 4, 1 meaning completely satisfied, and 4 meaning not satisfied
Long term parent's level of anxiety 1 month after the intervention Level of anxiety measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), with a minimum value of 20, meaning no or low anxiety, and a maximum value of 80, meaning high anxiety.
Long term parent's level of post-traumatic stress 1 month after the intervention Post-traumatic stress (PTSD) measured by the IMPACT OF EVENTS SCALE-Revised (IES-R), with a minimum value of 0, meaning no PTSD, and a maximum value of 88, meaning PTSD is high enough to suppress your immune system's functioning
Cost of the intervention 1 month after the intervention The costs will be estimated according to two perspectives : from the hospital point of view (time spent by the childcare nurse), and from the health insurance point of view (number of consultations and visits to the emergency room)
Parent's level of anxiety upon arrival on the emergency room Baseline Level of anxiety measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), with a minimum value of 20, meaning no or low anxiety, and a maximum value of 80, meaning high anxiety.
Parent's socio-economic position Baseline Socio-economic position of parents measured by their level of study
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
CHU Toulouse
🇫🇷Toulouse, France