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Clinical Trial Summary

The aim of this study is to develop an adapted version of a low-cost parenting program (Parenting for Lifelong Health for Young Children, PLH) to the specific needs of families in three low- and middle income countries (LMICs) in southeastern Europe (Romania, FYR of Macedonia and Republic of Moldova). The investigators want systematically evaluate key barriers and facilitators at the local, national and international levels that impact prevention of child behavioral disorders.

The investigators will prepare training materials adapted to Romanian, Moldovian, Albanian, Macedonian, and Russian and train facilitators and mentor coaches in the delivery of the PLH program in each country. Also, a pre-post study will be conducted testing the feasibility of the program and the evaluation and implementation methods with 40 families at each country site. This includes examination of outcomes related to implementation fidelity, program acceptability, and preliminary program effectiveness on reducing child behavior problems and associated risk factors.

This feasibility study is part of a larger implementation project. Developed on the MOST framework (the multiphase optimization strategy), this specific study will reflect the implementation of the first phase. There are two more phases to come: the Parenting for Lifelong Health for Young Children program will be optimized within the three countries by determining which components are most efficacious and cost-effective (phase 2). The optimized PLH programs will be tested in three RCTS in the countries (phase 3).


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) (Mikton et al., 2014). In particular, parenting programs 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 (Barlow et al., 2006; Knerr et al., 2013, Chen & Chan, 2015). These group-based programs typically aim to strengthen caregiver-child relationships through positive parenting and help parents to manage child behavior 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 implementing evidence-based parenting programs in resource poor contexts (Mikton, 2012). Parenting programs are often too expensive to deliver effectively at scale in low-resource settings due to their complexity, intensity, and length (Knerr et al., 2013). Parenting programs 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 program 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 programs implemented in LMICs are

1. effective at reducing violence against children,

2. integrated within the existing service delivery system,

3. feasible and culturally acceptable to service providers and families, and

4. scalable in terms of their affordability, replicability, and sustainability while reaching a maximum number of beneficiaries.

However, there are currently very few parenting programs that meet these criteria in LMICs (such as Romania, FYR of Macedonia and Republic of Moldova), where the need is the greatest.

The present study utilizes the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) as a framework for increasing the reach and enhancing the implementation of a parenting intervention for families with 2-9 years old children (Parenting for Lifelong Health for Young Children, PLH 2-9) in three southeastern European countries with restricted resources. The MOST framework is implemented over 3 distinct phases: 1) Preparation and Adaptation, 2) Optimization, and 3) Evaluation.

The Preparation and Adaptation Phase lays the foundation for program optimisation. This may include formative research, cultural/contextual adaptation, and feasibility piloting in preparation for further testing. A key objective of the Preparation Phase is to confirm the conceptual model of RISE that informs the selection of program components to optimize. Feasibility studies are considered important steps in preparation for larger experimental studies. They allow for the assessment of intervention feasibility by examining program dosage, implementation fidelity, and participant satisfaction. Although often limited in their ability to detect significant effects due to small sample sizes, feasibility studies are also opportunities to conduct exploratory analyses of intervention effects. This is particularly important when probing for potential harmful effects prior to testing in a larger population.

The RISE Study therefore includes developing three locally adapted variants of a promising parenting program which will be focused on the needs of families from LMICs with children ages 2 to 9 years who show elevated levels of externalizing problem behavior.

This feasibility study can be located in the Preparation and Adaptation phase of MOST. It is a small-scale feasibility pilot to test the feasibility of the 12-session PLH 2-9 and the evaluation and implementation methods (including preliminary outcomes of program effects). It is planned to create a locally-developed, evidence-based parenting intervention for 40 families per country. The following activities are linked to this study:

- Interviews with officials, experts and practitioners: interviews with 12-20 officials, experts and practitioners in order to gather information relating to their perceptions of the design and adaptation of a parenting intervention in;

- Gathering input from Parenting Experts Working Group in each country: meetings with a 6-member Parenting Experts Working Group, in order to incorporate these findings and their own expert opinions into the adaptation of PLH 2-9 content, process, and structure;

- Pre-Post Feasibility Study: a small-scale, pre-post evaluation to test the feasibility of the program with 40 families with children aged 2-9 years with elevated levels of child behavior problems (assessed with the Eyberg Child Behaviour Inventory, ECBI, a parent report of child externalizing problem behaviors) in each country site to examine outcomes related to implementation fidelity, program acceptability, and preliminary program effectiveness on reducing child behavior problems and associated risk factors. Moreover, the feasibility of the assessment procedures and the measures (not yet available in these regions/languages) will be tested. This means that based on the psychometric results of the feasibility study, measures may or may not be suitable for evaluation all of the listed outcomes.

- Preparation of the training materials adapted in Romanian, Moldovian, Albanian, Macedonian, and Russian, taking into account adaptation needs identified in the first three activities;

- Training of facilitators and mentor coaches in the delivery of the PLH 2-9 program in each country.

Based on the feasibility study (Adaptation and Preparation phase), the other two phases of the MOST framework will be tested in future research (studies will be registered separately):

- Phase 2: Optimization study using a factorial design testing 4 components of the parenting intervention

- Phase 3: The evaluation phase will involve testing of the optimized design (identified in phase 2) in a multisite 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 program in addition to evaluating program 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 program effectiveness, and how potential population characteristics might affect outcomes (e.g., moderators such as child age, gender, ethnicity, poverty, level of child behaviour problems, and other adversities). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03552250
Study type Interventional
Source Technische Universitaet Braunschweig
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 26, 2018
Completion date December 2, 2018

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