Child Development Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of a Group Intervention for Promoting Maternal Sensitivity in Primary Health Care Dyads at Psychosocial Risk. A Randomized Clinical Trial.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether a group intervention for primary health care dyads (two interacting people, in this case: mother-infant or caregiver-infant), which have been screened during pregnancy to be at psychosocial risk, has an impact on parental sensitivity.
The first three years of life of every child is fundamental for their development, these
years offer a unique window of opportunity for future health promotion, and different
investigations have proved that investing in this period of life not only has great economic
benefits, but social ones too.
In Chile the political decision to invest in these valuable years was translated into the
creation of a national social program called "Chile Crece Contigo". This Program seeks to
intervene in the physical, cognitive and socioemotional areas of development of every
Chilean child since they are conceived until they are 4 years old to promote the best
development outcome possible. The program identifies families at psychosocial vulnerability
and offers them specific interventions according to the risk detected.
In this context different health and social services are provided to pregnant women during
their health care visits, such as screening for different psychosocial risks (eg. Low social
support, poverty, tobacco or drug use) and according to this screening various interventions
are offered by Primary Health Care centers (eg. home visits).
It has been described that in groups at psychosocial risk the prevalence of interactional
problems, specifically alterations in the attachment style between the child and the
caregiver, is higher than in populations without these risks. This is relevant given that
the quality and style of attachment established in infancy predicts subsequent social,
emotional and cognitive development. Attachment styles, other than secure, have been
associated with behavioural problems in pre-school and school ages, psychopathology during
adolescence, later anxiety disorders and higher rates of using emergency health care
services.
One of the factors shown to predict the attachment style established between the child and
the caregiver is the parental sensitivity (also called maternal sensitivity)- defined as
every caregiver's pattern of conduct toward the child that soothes, and increases his
comfort and at the same time reduces his stress and disinterest. It also considers the
capacity of the adult to pay attention, interpret and respond to the child´s needs. The
literature suggests that having an adequate parental sensitivity is associated with a secure
attachment style at the end of the first year of life, and having low parental sensitivity
detected early in life (even as early as 6-8 weeks) predicts an insecure style of attachment
at age 2.
Preliminary Chilean data has shown that 25% of biparental families and up to 52.5% of
monoparental families with low income are have low parental sensitivity and are catalogued
as having "Interactional risk" (defined as a score of 6 or less points in the CARE-Index
scale), indicating the need of offering an intervention specifically aiming to work on the
caregiver-child relationship.
Since the creation of the Program "Chile Crece Contigo" there have been great achievements
toward the promotion of adequate infant development, especially in the cognitive and
physical areas of development, however the initiatives in the socio emotional area are
lacking. Issues in caregiver and child relationships are not addressed systematically, which
is why counting with interventions that promote parental sensitivity and the development of
secure attachment relationships that can be offered to families at psychosocial risk
responds to a social necessity and contributes to the promotion of adequate infant mental
health and family health.
Considering that up to date an intervention for the means described above and available to
be used in Primary Health Care did not exist, during the years 2008-2010 such intervention
was designed. The intervention was elaborated according to the method described by the UK
Medical Research Council. The intervention was then piloted in two Family Primary Health
centers showing an improvement in caregiver-child interactions. Analysis indicate that after
4 months of the intervention: caregivers valued positively having participated, there were
no losses to participating, there was an increase of 33% of secure attachment styles
(according to the Massie-Campbell Scale) which was not statistically significant, but could
result significant in a larger sample size.
The intervention proposed aims to improve caregiver-child relationships, specifically by
focusing on parental sensitivity, and is easily applicable and replicable in Primary Health
Care considering that it requires little personnel training, the materials used are easily
available and are cheap for Primary Health Care. However, the question of "has the
intervention proposed any impact on parental sensitivity in dyads at psychosocial risk?"
still has to be addressed.
We define the term "dyad" as two interacting people, in this case: mother-infant.
The objective of this study is to evaluate the impact of a group intervention on the
parental sensitivity of primary health care dyads that have been screened positive for
psychosocial risk during pregnancy.
Specific objectives:
- Evaluate the percentage of dyads catalogued as having "Interactional risk" in the
intervention group compared to the control group
- Evaluate the change in the score of parental sensitivity of the dyads in the
intervention group compared to the control group
- Evaluate the change in the number of depressive symptoms of the mother of the dyads in
the intervention group compared to the control group
Methods: randomized clinical trial. Dyads (mother-infants from 4 to 12 months of age) which
have been screened during pregnancy to be at psychosocial risk in 2 Family Health Care
Centers in the La Pintana district in Metropolitan Santiago, will be randomized to:
- Receive usual care ("control group") consisting in: home visits, evaluation by social
worker and planning interventions according to multidisciplinary team
- Participate in a group intervention besides receiving usual care The randomization will
be done with a computer program and sealed in dark envelopes so the sequence remains
occult until the dyad enters the study.
Parental sensitivity and interactional risk will be measured with the CARE-Index scale
during 3 timings: at enrollment (when the interview is done), immediately after
participating in the group workshop (from 1 to 2 weeks after the workshop is finished) and 4
months after (measuring times are also for control group). The scoring of the CARE-Index
scale will be done by expert external coders that are blind to the randomization group.
Symptoms for postpartum depression will also be measured with the Edinburgh postnatal
depression scale (EPDS).
Statistical analysis: the primary outcome is the change in the category of "Interactional
risk" in the CARE-Index scale. Secondary outcomes are the changes in the scores in parental
sensitivity and number of depressive symptoms. We will describe the data using averages,
percentiles and standard deviations for quantitative variables and proportions for nominal
variables. The bivariate analysis includes χ2 test statistics and t tests for independent
samples using the SPSS 17.0 Software. The sample size was determined to detect significant
differences in the percentage of dyads that change their interactional risk category in the
CARE-index scale between the intervention and control groups. Each group should have 90
dyads, assuming a change in 5% due only to the pass of time, a change in 20% of the
intervened dyads, a power of at least 80% with a 5% significance level, and estimating a 20%
loss of the dyads during the execution of the investigation.
The intervention consists in a group workshop (for up to 7 dyads with children aged between
6 and 12 months and two health care professional monitors) of four sessions of two hours
each, held weekly. One of the sessions is characterized as including the fathers or other
caregivers relevant to the upbringing of the children. Each session is structured around
various activities that specifically deal with the skills associated with parental
sensitivity and address relevant issues to child rearing, considering the development of the
child.
The intervention was designed through the methodology proposed by the UK Medical Research
Council and has been tested in a pilot study of 11 dyads in two primary health care centers
and showed an improvement of 33 per cent in the secure attachment style in the dyads (not
statistically significant).
Recruiting, enrollment and procedures: mothers that have been previously screened positive
during pregnancy to be at psychosocial risk will be contacted for an interview if their
child is between 4 and 12 months old. In the interview they will be asked if they would like
to participate in the study and sign an informed consent form. Once they have done this an
interview will take place to collect socio demographic data regarding the family, record a 3
minute video of the dyads playing (to be coded with the CARE-index scale) and an Edinburgh
postnatal depression scale applied. The interviewer will then assign the dyad to the
intervention or control group (through the use of closed numbered envelopes to which the
interviewer is blind).
If the dyad is recruited for the intervention group they will be invited to participate in
the group workshop mentioned above, besides receiving the usual interventions the center
does for dyads of psychosocial risk. And asked to come to the centers for the measurements
of the following CARE-Index and Edinburgh postnatal depression scales.
If the dyad is recruited for the control group they will receive the usual interventions the
center offers dyads at psychosocial risk and asked to come for the following measurements
(as in the intervention group).
The recruiting will be done by trained interviewers (different health care professionals
that work at the primary health care centers) that will follow a strict protocol to avoid
missing entering data and maintain confidentiality at all times. The data will also be
managed with strict confidential rules.
If the group intervention should prove to have a positive impact on maternal sensitivity it
could be used in other primary health care centers, constituting an effective form for
promoting adequate socio emotional development the first years of life.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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