Child Maltreatment Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Theory-Based Intervention to Prevent Child Neglect in High-Risk
Verified date | August 2018 |
Source | Boston Medical Center |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This is a pilot randomized controlled trial of a behavioral intervention focused on improving parenting skills and preventing child neglect in families of children with special health care needs. The intervention focuses on problem solving, distress tolerance, and emotional regulation skills.
Status | Withdrawn |
Enrollment | 0 |
Est. completion date | August 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | August 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 16 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Primary caregiver of a child under age 7 with a special health care need, defined as a chronic physical, emotional, or behavioral health condition - Child has been referred to the Child Protection Team for neglect that was ultimately not substantiated - Fluent in English or Spanish Exclusion Criteria: - Prior history of substantiated child maltreatment |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Boston Medical Center | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Boston Medical Center | Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (depression present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Social Adjustment Scale-Short Report | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Social Adjustment Scale-Short Report. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (social adjustment present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Medical Outcomes Survey Social Support | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Medical Outcomes Survey Social Support. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (social support present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Perceived Stress Scale | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Perceived Stress Scale. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (stress present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Parenting Stress-Short Form | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Parenting Stress-Short Form. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (parenting stress present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Parenting Scale | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Parenting Scale. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (parenting style present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Other | Parental well-being and mental health - the Parent Development Interview-Revised | The investigators will use validated measures to evaluate parental well-being. The measures include the Parent Development Interview-Revised. The investigators will analyze the measure as a continuous variable (overall score) and dichotomous variable (reflective functioning present or absent) and will obtain empirical estimates of the following study parameters to inform power calculations for a subsequent study: 1) within-group standard deviation of each continuous outcome measure; 2) proportion of control group subjects to experience each dichotomous outcome; and 3) correlation over time of the outcome measured at both baseline and follow-up. This will allow the investigators to power a later study, for both dichotomous and continuous outcomes. | Change in score from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Primary | Study Logistics - subject enrollment | As this is a pilot study, the primary objective is to field test study logistics, including subject enrollment. The investigators will review monthly counts of enrolled subjects from baseline to 12 months post-randomization, and will compare the number of subjects in each study arm to target enrollment goals. Because of emerging consensus that group-to-group comparisons in a pilot study are not only invalid but also misleading, estimating effect size is deliberately not our primary study objective. | Monthly change from baseline to 12 months post randomization | |
Primary | Study Logistics - fidelity of intervention delivery | For the intervention group, treatment fidelity will be assessed by audio taping a random 10% of sessions and scoring them with standardized instruments. The investigators will measure the proportion of sessions delivered with fidelity. Because of emerging consensus that group-to-group comparisons in a pilot study are not only invalid but also misleading, estimating effect size is deliberately not our primary study objective. | 3 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Re-referral to child protection team or social services | The investigators will obtain empirical estimates of the proportion of control group subjects to be re-referred to child protection team or social services by 3 months post randomization. This will allow the investigators to power a later study for this dichotomous outcome. | 3 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Re-referral to child protection team or social services | The investigators will obtain empirical estimates of the proportion of control group subjects to be re-referred to child protection team or social services by 6 months post randomization. This will allow the investigators to power a later study for this dichotomous outcome. | 6 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Re-referral to child protection team or social services | The investigators will obtain empirical estimates of the proportion of control group subjects to be re-referred to child protection team or social services by 12 months post randomization. This will allow the investigators to power a later study for this dichotomous outcome. | 12 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Adherence to recommended medical care | The investigators will conduct chart review to count the number of missed medical appointments, emergency department visits, and hospitalizations in the 90 days preceding the analysis. The investigators will specifically examine the proportion of control group subjects to experience each outcome and will use this data to power a later study. | 3 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Adherence to recommended medical care | The investigators will conduct chart review to count the number of missed medical appointments, emergency department visits, and hospitalizations in the 90 days preceding the analysis. The investigators will specifically examine the proportion of control group subjects to experience each outcome and will use this data to power a later study. | 6 months post randomization | |
Secondary | Adherence to recommended medical care | The investigators will conduct chart review to count the number of missed medical appointments, emergency department visits, and hospitalizations in the 90 days preceding the analysis. The investigators will specifically examine the proportion of control group subjects to experience each outcome and will use this data to power a later study. | 12 months post randomization |
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