Evaluation of the Health-Related Quality of Life and Mental Health of Parents With Children and Adolescents With a Rare Disease Based on the Results of a Randomized Controlled Trial to Investigate a Family-Based Intervention and an Online Intervention for Affected Families (CARE-FAM-NET)

Authored by

Antonia Steinberg, Johannes Boettcher, Anna Leidger, Ania C. Muntau, Jonas Denecke, Nicole Kaiser, Anne Daubmann, Antonia Zapf, Karl Wegscheider, Ann Kathrin Ozga, Anna Isabella Suling, Monika Bullinger, Julia Quitmann, Jörg Dirmaier, Stefanie Witt, Farhad Rezvani, Christine Mundlos, Lisa Biehl, Miriam Rassenhofer, Jörg M. Fegert, Dunja Tutus, Gerald Willms, Jan Zeidler, Nicolas Pardey, Johann Matthias Graf von der Schulenburg, Silke Wiegand-Grefe

Abstract

Parents caring for children with rare diseases are more impaired regarding health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and mental health than healthy controls and norm data. To address the research gap in psychological care for these parents, this study evaluates the effectiveness of two family-based interventions. The children affected by rare disease and their families network (CARE-FAM-NET) study is a multicenter randomized controlled 2 × 2 factorial trial for affected families with children (0–21 years). This paper focuses on evaluating the impact of two interventions, one face-to-face (CARE-FAM) and one online (WEP-CARE), on the HRQoL and mental health of parents. One thousand, one hundred sixty-eight parents participated: TAU = 291, CARE-FAM = 296, WEP-CARE = 300, and CARE-FAM + WEP-CARE combined = 281. Data were collected at four time points over a period of 18 months using standardized questionnaires. The results had to be interpreted exploratively. The results indicate that there are no clinically relevant differences in the parents' HRQoL and mental health between the treatment groups. However, time-dependent differences in the intervention effects for WEP-CARE were observed. Although the results did not show clear relevant differences between conditions, trends in improvement in HrQoL and mental health were identified. CARE-FAM shows a greater reduction in parental distress and WEP-CARE shows a greater distortion of distress, particularly at T3 and T4. Given the exploratory nature of this study, it highlights the urgent need for further confirmatory research in this area.

Details

Organisation(s)
Center for Health Economics Research Hannover (CHERH)
External Organisation(s)
Universität Hamburg
German Center for Child and Adolescent Health (DZKJ)
German Alliance of Chronic Rare Diseases
Ulm University
aQua Institute for Applied Quality Improvement and Research in Health Care GmbH
Type
Article
Journal
Family process
Volume
64
ISSN
0014-7370
Publication date
15.05.2025
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Social Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1111/famp.70041 (Access: Open )