Researchers conducted a small pilot study to see if an online self-help program for parents of children with celiac disease was practical and acceptable. The program included education and family activities. The study involved 98 parents of children aged 8 to 11. The main goal was to see if the program could be run smoothly for a future, larger study.
Parents who used the program found it acceptable. They also reported seeing moderate improvements in their child's social life and overall emotional well-being. These findings are based on what parents reported, not on direct measures from the children. The study did not report any safety concerns.
It is important to be careful with these results. This was a small, short-term pilot study designed to test the program's setup, not to prove it works. The results show a possible link, but more research is needed. The confidence intervals for the improvements were wide, meaning the true effect could be smaller or larger. The program itself may need changes before a bigger trial.
Readers should see this as an early, encouraging step. It suggests that supporting parents online might help families manage celiac disease, but it is far from a proven solution. Larger and longer studies are needed to confirm if this approach truly benefits children's quality of life.