Designing strategies to support Implementation of iNtensive Therapy for Early Reach through PLAY (INTERPLAY) for young children with cerebral palsy: a study protocol
Alicia Hilderley, Christine Cassidy, Sandra Reist-Asencio, Chelsea Tao, Stephen Tao, Susan McCoy, Divya Vurrabindi, Kathleen O’Grady, Mia Herrero, Liz Cambridge, Eleanor Leverington, Victoria Micek, John Andersen, Darcy Fehlings, Adam Kirton

TL;DR
This study aims to improve access to early intensive manual therapy for young children with cerebral palsy in Canada by identifying barriers and creating practical strategies for implementation.
Contribution
The study introduces a mixed-methods approach to design a tailorable toolbox of implementation strategies for early manual therapy delivery.
Findings
A mixed-methods design will identify barriers and facilitators to early manual therapy delivery.
An implementation strategy toolbox will be developed and prioritized for national dissemination.
Qualitative and quantitative data will be combined to refine and explain implementation strategies.
Abstract
Intensive manual therapy is important for improving lifelong upper limb motor outcomes for infants and toddlers with cerebral palsy. This play-based therapy is delivered by caregivers who are coached by occupational therapists. However, access to this therapy is very limited for Canadian children with cerebral palsy younger than two years old. This project aims to first identify barriers and facilitators and then design implementation strategies to support early intensive manual therapy delivery for infants and toddlers with cerebral palsy across Canada. A mixed-methods sequential explanatory design will be used with four consecutive phases. The updated Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research will guide the study. Quantitative data will be collected from a survey in Phase One. Participants will be recruited from three groups: (1) Caregivers of children with cerebral palsy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders · Occupational Therapy Practice and Research · Family and Disability Support Research
