Ensuring Intervention Fidelity of an Attention Control Arm in a Multisite Randomized Controlled Trial

Amy R. Newman, Karen M. Moody, Kerri Becktell, Erin Connelly, Cynthia Holladay, Katie Parisio, Jonathan L. Powell, Angela Steineck, Verna L. Hendricks-Ferguson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Intervention fidelity is a critical element of randomized controlled trials, yet reporting of intervention fidelity among attention control arms is limited. Lack of fidelity to attention control procedures can affect study outcomes by either overestimating or underestimating the efficacy of the intervention under examination. Objectives: This brief report describes the approach researchers took to promote fidelity to the attention control armof a pediatric palliative care randomized controlled trial funded by the National Institutes of Health. Methods: The Informational Meetings for Planning and Coordinating Treatment trial aims to determine the efficacy of a communication intervention that uses care team dyads (i.e., physicians partnered with nurses or advanced practice providers) to engage parents of children with cancer who have a poor prognosis in structured conversations about prognostic information, goals of care, and care planning. The intervention is compared with an attention control arm, which provides parents with structured conversations on common pediatric cancer education topics, such as talking to their child about their cancer, clinical trials, cancer treatment, side effects, and so forth. National Institutes of Health guidelines for assessing and implementing strategies to promote intervention fidelity were used to design (a) the attention control arm of a randomized controlled trial, (b) related attention control arm training, and (c) quality assurance monitoring. Results: Attention control study procedures were designed to mirror that of the intervention arm (i.e., same number, frequency, and time spent in study visits). Cluster randomization was used to allocate care team dyads to one arm of the randomized controlled trial. Care team dyads assigned to the attention control arm participated in online training sessions to learn attention control procedures, the different roles of research team members, and quality assurance methods. Fidelity to attention control procedures is assessed by both the interveners themselves and a quality assurance team. Discussion: Study design, training, and delivery are all critical to attention control fidelity. Baseline training often needs to be supplemented with booster training when time gaps occur between study start-up and implementation. Quality assurance procedures are essential to determine whether interveners consistently deliver attention control procedures correctly.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)166-171
Number of pages6
JournalNursing Research
Volume73
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2024

Keywords

  • attention control
  • communication
  • fidelity
  • methods
  • randomized controlled trials as topic

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Nursing

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