Child Anxiety Clinical Trial
— PWAOfficial title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial of an Online Intervention to Prevent Anxiety in the Children of Anxious Parents
Verified date | May 2022 |
Source | University of Sussex |
Contact | Amy Arbon |
Phone | 01273 641444 |
a.arbon[@]nhs.net | |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This is a randomised controlled trial of an intervention to reduce symptoms of anxiety in the children of anxious parents. Parents will participate in an online intervention which helps them develop a calm, consistent, behaviour management style. The parents will be randomised to the intervention or a control group with no intervention. The intervention itself will undergo a component analysis to determine whether some modules are more effective than others.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 3508 |
Est. completion date | April 2023 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2023 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 16 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Be a parent (any gender, adoptive/biological/step/foster/grandparent) aged 16+, of a child aged 2 to 11 years (inclusive). The index parent must have at least 50 days' contact with the index child per year and confirm that they see enough of the child to report on the child's current anxiety level. - Index parent must be a UK resident. - Self-report subjectively substantial levels of current or lifetime anxiety. - Able to commit to completion of measures at (up to) three time points even if allocated to the control arm. Exclusion Criteria: - N/A |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | University of Sussex | Brighton |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Sussex | Brighton & Sussex Medical School, Kavli Trust |
United Kingdom,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in child anxiety | Measured using the Spence Children's Anxiety Scale (SCAS-P and Preschool SCAS if the child is aged 6 or under).
SCAS-P: Minimum 0 Maximum 114. A higher total score is indicative of higher level of child anxiety. T scores used to indicate clinical levels of anxiety however this is a screen not a diagnostic instrument. SCAS Preschool: Minimum 0 Maximum 112. A higher total indicates a higher level of pre-school child anxiety. A score of 1SD above the mean for a subscale or the total score indicates clinical investigated would be warranted. |
Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months. | |
Secondary | Change in parent anxiety and parental wellbeing | Measured using Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorder (SCARED-A): Minimum 0, Maximum 142. . Higher total score (>30) predictive of a current anxiety disorder. Higher subscale scores associated with elevated anxiety symptoms of clinically defines anxiety disorders. | Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months. | |
Secondary | Change in parent anxiety and parental wellbeing | Measured using Short Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale. Minimum score 7. Maximum score 35. Raw scores converted into metric scores. Higher scores indicate higher positive mental wellbeing. | Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months. | |
Secondary | Change in child wellbeing and health | Measured using Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC-17). Minimum 0. Max 35. A higher score indicates a worse psychosocial functioning. Scores predictive of psychopathology at following levels: Internalizing score positive if = 5 PSC-17 Externalizing score positive if = 7 PSC-17 Attention score positive if =7 PSC-17 Total score positive if =15. | Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months. | |
Secondary | Change in child wellbeing and health | Measured using EQ-5D-Y Proxy. Minimum 11111 Maximum 33333. A higher score indicates a worse health status. | Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months. | |
Secondary | Change in anxiogenic parenting behaviours | Measure using Comprehensive Parenting Behaviour Questionnaire (CPBQ). Minimum 104. Maximum 520. The scale is split into broad dimensions, subscales and sub subscales. Higher scores are associated with greater level of parenting behaviour under investigation in the given subscale: both positive (e.g. warmth) and challenging (e.g. overprotection). | Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months | |
Secondary | Change in anxiogenic parenting behaviours | Measured using a parenting experience scale (constructed specifically for this study, divided into 8 modules).
Core: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive. Module A: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive (Q2: R scored). Module B: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive (all are R scored). Module C: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive. Module D: Q1, Q3, Q4: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive (Q4: R scored). Module D Q2: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive. Module E: Min 1 Max 4. Higher score = Negative (Q3: R scored). Module F: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive (Q1 and Q4: R scored). Module G Q1: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Positive (Q1: R scored). Module GQ2: Min 3 Max 5: Higher score Negative (Note: Both ends of the scale are maladaptive). Module G Q3: Min 1 Max 5. Higher score = Negative. |
Baseline, 6 months, and up to 21 months |
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