Participation Steps
- Visit the study recruitment page and select a study you may be interested in. Follow the instructions on that page to contact us.
- If your child meets the initial study inclusion criteria, we will keep your contact information in our confidential file. The next step is to have a physical evaluation. Participants from the tri-state area (NY, NJ, CT) may make a free appointment to be evaluated. If you live out of the immediate area, we may send you a screening form for your child's physical or occupational therapist to complete. This will also involve an interview with you. These are important as they tell us the likelihood that your child will tolerate and benefit from our research so that we do not waste your time.
- If your child meets all of the inclusion criteria after the in-person or PT/OT screening, he/she will be invited to participate in a study.
- Children must be evaluated directly prior to the start of an intervention. All evaluations will take place at either the Movement Sciences Program laboratories located in 528 West 121st St. and Thompson Halls at Teachers College, Columbia University (525 W. 120th St., New York, NY 10027), or at the Robotics and Rehabilitation Laboratory at the Mechanical Engineering Department at Columbia University (500 W. 120th St., New York, NY 10027). Location will be dependent on the study.
- Training Time! Depending on the study, this will involve between 5 to 15 days of one-to-one intervention in a day camp setting, or 4 weeks of one-to-one trunk support training. Parents are not required to stay during the day.
- Post-training evaluations. Children are immediately tested after treatment, and then a few months after completion of the intervention/training. Following the intervention, you may be asked to complete weekly activity logs that outline how many hours per week your child spends practicing bimanual tasks for which both arms are needed. After all evaluations, your study obligations are complete although you may feel free to use us a a resource for your child anytime thereafter.
Volunteer
We welcome volunteers interested in gaining clinical experience working with children. Depending on the study, volunteers are trained and supervised in administering constraint-induced movement therapy (CIT), bimanual training (HABIT), or postural-reaching intervention by experienced physical and occupational therapists. Prior volunteers have included physical and occupational therapists from the US and abroad, physical and occupational therapy students fulfilling internship requirements, clinical psychology graduate students, speech pathology graduate students, kinesiology undergraduate and graduate students, and individuals looking to meet the "volunteering and related-work requirements" for admission to physical or occupational therapy school. Occasionally, volunteers assist with data entry and other project-related activities. Participation is a rewarding experience in which you may make a difference in the life of a child with cerebral palsy and their family. Please email your cover letter and an updated CV to Karen Chin at cpresearch@tc.columbia.edu if interested.