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Clinical Trial Summary

The overall RISE project aims to adapt, optimise and test a low-cost parenting programme for families in three southeastern European countries (North Macedonia, Republic of Moldova, Romania). Therefore, the investigators apply the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) and conduct the study over 3 phases: during the first Phase (Preparation) the feasibility of the intervention and the assessment and implementation procedures were tested in a small pilot study. In the second Phase (Optimization), 8 different programme combinations were tested in order to identify the most effective and cost-effective combination in the three countries. Now, in the third Phase (Evaluation), the optimised intervention identified in Phase 2 will be tested in a randomised controlled trial. The investigators also apply dimensions of the RE-AIM framework to maximise the reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation within the existing service infrastructure and maintained use of the new intervention. For the current Phase 3, the investigators aim to recruit a total of 864 parents (n = 288 per country) of children with elevated child behaviour problems aged 2 to 9 years. After pre-assessment the families will be randomly assigned to the intervention group or the control group. Parents in the intervention group will receive a parenting programme (5 sessions, Parenting for Lifelong Health for Young Children, PLH-YC) and the parents in the control condition will receive one lecture on parenting (Raising Healthy Children). Parents will be asked to complete assessments after intervention completion (post-assessment) and 12 months after pre-assessment (follow-up assessment) in order to detect immediate and more longterm effects.


Clinical Trial Description

Over the past decade there have been increasing calls for the scale-up of evidence-based interventions in order to reduce the risk of violence against children in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). In particular, group-based parenting programmes for families with young children have been shown to be effective in reducing the risk of child maltreatment and improving child wellbeing with promising evidence emerging from low- and middle-income countries. These group-based programmes typically aim to strengthen caregiver-child relationships through positive parenting and help parents to manage child behaviour problems through effective, age-appropriate, nonviolent discipline strategies. Despite the emerging evidence of the effectiveness of parenting interventions in reducing violence against children, many local governments and service providers in LMICs face multiple challenges in implementing evidence-based parenting programmes in resource poor contexts. Parenting programmes are often too expensive to deliver effectively at scale in low-resource settings due to their complexity, intensity, and length. Parenting programmes developed and evaluated in other contexts also may not fit the local service delivery context and may require adaptation to be relevant to the local culture of families. Additional programme content may also be necessary to address acute economic deprivation, high community violence, and parental distress. The process of delivery may also need to be simplified to improve participant engagement and the quality of delivery. As a result, it is essential that programmes implemented in LMICs are - Effective at reducing violence against children, - Integrated within the existing service delivery system of the country, - Feasible and culturally acceptable to service providers and families, and - Scalable in terms of their affordability, replicability, and sustainability while reaching a maximum number of beneficiaries. However, there are currently very few parenting programmes that meet these criteria in LMICs (such as North Macedonia, Republic of Moldova, and Romania), where the need is the greatest. The Parenting for Lifelong Health (PLH) initiative is focused on the development, evaluation, and dissemination of parenting programmes to reduce violence against children and improve child wellbeing in LMIC. It was established to address the need to develop low-cost, evidence-based parenting programmes that can be integrated within existing service delivery systems in LMIC. The PLH for Young Children from 2-9 y. (PLH-YC) programme includes general content like one-on-one time/child-led play; praising and rewarding children; instructions, household rules, and routines; managing difficult behaviours: ignore and consequences; reflection and moving on. Core activities during sessions include group discussions illustrated vignettes, role-plays, collaborative problem solving, practicing skills at home. The overall RISE project has two general objectives: (1) the first objective relates to the adaption, optimisation and evaluation of selected best practice intervention condition (MOST), while (2) the second objective relates to implementation issues (RE-AIM). The primary objective of the overall project is adapt, optimise and test a parenting programme so that it meets the specific needs and constraints of families in three LMIC in Southeastern Europe. The design is informed by the Multiphase Optimisation Strategy (MOST) and is conduced over 3 distinct phases: 1) Preparation, 2) Optimisation, and 3) Evaluation. In Phase 1, the feasibility of the intervention and research methods was tested in a small pilot study in North Macedonia, Republic of Moldova, and Romania. In Phase 2, 8 different programme components were tested in a factorial experiment to identify the most effective and cost-effective combination. In the present Phase 3, the optimised intervention (identified in Phase 2) will be tested in a randomised-controlled trial. A secondary objective of this project is to carefully assess barriers to implementation, integration with existing service delivery systems, and scale-ups from the outset to facilitate sustainability and real world applicability at the end of the project. When introducing such an innovative intervention in resource-limited settings, it is important to focus on the implementation processes that increase reach, efficacy, adoption, and sustainability of culturally-adapted and optimized versions of the programme in addition to evaluating programme effectiveness. The theoretical model for the implementation framework in the RISE project is RE-AIM (Reach, Efficacy, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance, Glasgow et al., 2011). As a result, investigators will examine the adoption (defined as the proportion of settings willing to initiate the intervention), reach (the proportion of eligible individuals that participate in the intervention) and implementation (the fidelity, adherence, dosage assessed with multiple measures) as well as on effectiveness and sustainability of the RISE project at the organizational and participants' level. In addition, it will be examined how implementation factors influence programme effectiveness, and how potential population characteristics might affect outcomes (e.g., moderators such as baseline parent mental health, for details see study protocol, Taut et al., in preparation). The first two Phases have been successfully completed. For details of Phase 1, see trial registration (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03552250) and study protocol (doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026684). For details of Phase 2, please refer to the trial registration (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03865485) or the study protocol (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2019.105855). This presently registered study relates to the Evaluation Phase (Phase 3). This randomised-controlled trial ist to test the effectiveness and the cost-effectiveness of the optimised intervention (identified in the factorial experiment, Phase 2) in the three LMIC North Macedonia, Republic of Moldova and Romania. More details can be found in the study protocol for Phase 3. Note: The investigators have developed a stepwise safety plan in case the local restrictions due to COVID-19 pandemic will not allow in-person assessments and parent groups (as planned). The safety plan includes the reduction of the number of parents per group size switch to online delivery of PLH-YC and lecture / phone assessments. For more details, please see the study protocol (Taut et al., submitted). Note: The investigators will assess further variables that are not mentioned in the outcome section. These are moderator variables that will be only assessed once (at baseline) and that are described in the study protocol (Taut et al., in preparation). Note: Based on the experiences during the pre-assessments, an interim reduction of measures was necessary to prevent overburdening of families (more time needed for assessments because of the pandemic situation). It was decided to take out some of the other pre-specified outcome measures for the post-assessment (for details, see outcome section). Note: Assessment of parent-child relationship: In addition to the coherence rating, two scales of the FAARS rating (Warmth, Criticism) were added for the following reasons: The FAARS scales are assumed to be closely related to the mechanisms and outcomes of a social learning theory based parenting program and may better capture the expected change. These scales also showed good validity in other parenting intervention studies (e.g., Smith et al., 2013). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04721730
Study type Interventional
Source University of Bremen
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date December 7, 2020
Completion date March 14, 2022

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