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Game + Activation for Asthma (ALP Trial)

N/A
Waitlist Available
Led By Julie Brown, MD, MPH
Research Sponsored by Seattle Children's Hospital
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be younger than 18 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up 3 months
Awards & highlights

ALP Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine the effect on knowledge and behavior of playing an educational asthma computer game during a pediatric Emergency Department (ED) asthma visit among children ages 7 - 15 years. The ED cares for a high-risk population of children who have difficulty accessing preventive care well. The addition of a computer game to usual asthma emergency care could be a simple, effective, enjoyable way to improve patients' asthma knowledge, beliefs, and management practices. This project has the potential to lead to larger studies evaluating the benefit of education with and without behavioral interventions such as motivational interviewing. This project plans to implement and evaluate the use of a goal setting activity and the educational asthma computer game, "Quest for the Code" (Starlight Starbright Children's FoundationTM), in the ED of Seattle Children's Hospital. In a randomized trial of Spanish and English speaking children ages 7 - 15 years receiving ED care for their asthma, the investigators will evaluate the effects of the game on children's asthma knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors. The investigators aim to compare the change in asthma knowledge and locus of control after 3 months, for children who play the computerized asthma game, versus those who receive standard care in the ED. The investigators will also compare changes in asthma severity and activity limitations over 3 months, for children who play the asthma game without goal-setting, children who playing the game with goal-setting, and children who receive standard care. Overall, the investigators hypothesize that educational asthma game play by pediatric patients with acute asthma will improve asthma knowledge, compared with standard care.

ALP Trial Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~3 months
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and 3 months for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Outcome measures can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary outcome measures
Child Knowledge
Secondary outcome measures
Locus of control

ALP Trial Design

4Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Active Control
Group I: Game + ActivationExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
Group II: GameExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
Group III: Booklet + ActivationExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
Group IV: BookletActive Control1 Intervention

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

Seattle Children's HospitalLead Sponsor
301 Previous Clinical Trials
5,216,857 Total Patients Enrolled
4 Trials studying Asthma
1,561 Patients Enrolled for Asthma
Julie Brown, MD, MPHPrincipal InvestigatorSeattle Children's

Frequently Asked Questions

These questions and answers are submitted by anonymous patients, and have not been verified by our internal team.
~7 spots leftby Apr 2025