Child Mental Disorder Clinical Trial
— RISEOfficial title:
RISE- Prevention of Child Mental Health Problems in Southeastern Europe - Adapt, Optimize, Test and Extend Parenting for Lifelong Health - A Factorial Study (Phase 2 of MOST)
Verified date | April 2020 |
Source | University of Bremen |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The aim of this study is to optimize an adapted version of a parenting program, Parenting for
Lifelong Health for Young Children (PLH), to meet the specific needs of families in three
low- and middle-income countries in Southeastern Europe (Romania, FYR of Macedonia and
Republic of Moldova) using a cluster factorial experimental design to select the most
efficacious, cost-effective, and scalable intervention components. This study is the second
phase of a three-phase research project (www.rise-plh.eu).
The cluster factorial experiment will examine the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness, and
implementation of three selected components of the PLH for Children program to inform the
selection of the most effective, cost-effective, and implementable components to include in a
prevention package prior to testing it in a subsequent RCT. The cluster factorial experiment
will be conducted across three Southeastern European country sites. Each site will recruit
families with children aged two to nine years who have elevated levels of child behavior
problems, including specifically high-risk groups, such as minorities (e.g. Roma families).
Program facilitators will be recruited from local agencies and schools. The factorial
experimental trial will randomize 16 clusters in each country to one of 8 experimental
conditions which consist of any combination of the three components (program length: 5
sessions/10 sessions; engagement booster: high/low; fidelity booster: high supervision/low
supervision). The purpose of this factorial experiment is to estimate the main effects of the
three intervention components and interactions between the components.
At the end of the cluster factorial experiment, we will develop an optimized version of the
program by selecting components or component levels that have the highest level of
effectiveness as based on effect size (rather than p-values). We will also take into
consideration factors regarding cost-effectiveness and implementation outcomes when designing
this optimized intervention package.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 835 |
Est. completion date | May 10, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | May 10, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria (for caregivers/parents): 1. Age 18 or older; 2. Primary caregiver responsible for the care of a child between the ages of two and nine; 3. Report elevated levels of child behavior problems for the child that he/she chooses to be part of the study (based on the Child and Adolescent Disruptive Behavior Inventory, oppositional defiant disorder subscale (8 items); scores above the mean based on normative data 4. Have lived in the same household as this child at least four nights a week in the previous month and will continue to do so; 5. Agreement of being randomized to the different conditions in the study (PLH for Children program); 6. Provision of Informed consent to participate in the full study. Exclusion Criteria (for caregivers/parents): Exclusion criteria for adult parents or caregivers comprise: - any adult 1) exhibiting severe mental health problems or acute mental disabilities; - 2) that has been referred to child protection services due to child abuse. Inclusion Criteria (for program facilitators): 1. Age 18 or older; 2. Participate in PLH facilitator training workshop; 3. Available to deliver the entire PLH 2-9 intervention 4. Provision of Informed Consent to participate in the full study Inclusion Criteria (for program coaches) 1. Age 18 or older; 2. Previous participation in PLH facilitator training workshop; 3. Participate in PLH coach training workshop; 4. Available to deliver coaching sessions during delivery of the PLH 2-9 intervention 5. Provision of Informed Consent to participate in the full study |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Moldova, Republic of | Health for Youth Association | Chisinau | |
North Macedonia | Institute for Marriage, Family and Systemic Practice - ALTERNATIVA | Skopje | |
Romania | Babes Boylai University | Cluj-Napoca |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Bremen | Alpen-Adria-University Klagenfurt, Babes-Bolyai University, Bangor University, Georgia State University, Health for Youth Association, Institute for Marriage, Family and Systemic Practice – ALTERNATIVA, University of Cape Town, University of Oxford |
Moldova, Republic of, North Macedonia, Romania,
Barlow J, Johnston I, Kendrick D, Polnay L, Stewart-Brown S. Individual and group-based parenting programmes for the treatment of physical child abuse and neglect. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2006 Jul 19;(3):CD005463. Review. — View Citation
Chen M, Chan KL. Effects of Parenting Programs on Child Maltreatment Prevention: A Meta-Analysis. Trauma Violence Abuse. 2016 Jan;17(1):88-104. doi: 10.1177/1524838014566718. Epub 2015 Jan 8. — View Citation
Knerr W, Gardner F, Cluver L. Improving positive parenting skills and reducing harsh and abusive parenting in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review. Prev Sci. 2013 Aug;14(4):352-63. doi: 10.1007/s11121-012-0314-1. Review. — View Citation
Mikton, C. (2012). Two challenges to importing evidence-based child maltreatment prevention programs developed in high-income countries to low- and middle-income countries: Generalizability and affordability. In H. Dubowitz (Ed.), World perspectives on child abuse (p. 97). Aurora, CO: International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect.
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Change in levels of Intimate Partner Violence (29 items); continuous total score and 4 sub-scales (level of severity) | Intimate partner violence will be assessed with a screening instrument, the family maltreatment measure (Heyman et al. 2013) and an adaption of the revised Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS2S). The measure assesses adult self-report of perpetration and victimization of intimate partner physical and psychological aggression. Assessments measure the frequency of negotiation, physical assault, psychological aggression, and physical injury. Answers are coded on a 5-point Likert scale of 0 to 4, with an additional response for incidences that happened but not in the past month. This measure indicates an overall indication of IPV on a level of severity (sum of items) and prevalence (dichotomous variable indicating experience of conflict or not) as well as for each subscale. Only severity is examined here. For the current study a 9-point Likert scale of 0 to 8 is used, with an additional response for incidences that happened but not in the past month. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Other | Change in levels of parental relationship quality: Couple Satisfaction Index / self-report (4 items); continuous total score | This 4 item measure assesses relationship satisfaction among intimate partners. Items are summed to create a total score. CSI-4 scores can range from 0 to 21. Higher scores indicate higher levels of relationship satisfaction. CSI-4 scores falling below 13.5 suggest notable relationship dissatisfaction. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Other | Child and Adolescent Behavior Inventory (CABI), oppositional defiant disorder subscale (9 items) | The CABI questionnaires assesses different types of problem behaviour in childhood and adolescence. The CABI exists of 75 items measuring different areas of psychopathology, e.g., anxiety, depression, conduct disorder or attention deficit hyperactive disorder. Eight items assess oppositional defiant disorder directed towards adults and one additional item measures if any of the eight behaviors currently cause significant problems. The sum score of the first eight items can range from 0-40 and will be used as eligibility screening tool. Respondents with scores =10 will be included in the Optimization Study. Higher scores indicate higher levels of symptoms. | Pre (before start of intervention) | |
Other | Change in quality of life: Child Health Utility 9D (CHU9D; 9 items) | The CHU9D measures parent-reported child health-related quality of life. The questionnaire consists of nine dimensions (worried, sad, pain, tired, annoyed, schoolwork/homework, sleep, daily routine, activities) with five levels (e.g., 1 = "don't feel worried"; 5 = "very worried"). Higher scores indicate lower levels of quality of life. The scores of the CHU9D range from 9-45. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Other | Cost-effectiveness / cost-analyses | Cost-effectiveness ratios in terms of Euros per 1-point reduction of the CBCL subscale score "Aggressive Behavior" of the PLH 2-9 program and Euros per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained will be calculated to assess and compare the cost-effectiveness of different combinations of program components. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Other | RE-AIM Reach: Recruitment rate | Number of families who were eligible for inclusion and provided consent to participate in the program divided by the number of target population who were exposed to recruitment activities | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) | |
Other | RE-AIM Implementation: Fidelity (percentage of session activities delivered per session) | Percentage of number of session activities delivered by facilitators (by facilitator group, implementing agency, and participating country site; facilitator fidelity check-list reports) | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) | |
Other | RE-AIM Implementation: Fidelity (mean percent of activities delivered per session) | Average number of activities delivered divided by total number of activities per session (by facilitator group, implementing agency, and participating country site; facilitator self-reports | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) | |
Other | Change in levels of parental stress: Parental Stress Scale (18-items) | The Parental Stress Scale measures parental stress across different domains (rewards, stressors, satisfaction, loss of control) with 18 items. An example, from the domain stressors, is "The major source of stress in my life is my child(ren)". Caregivers answer on a scale from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5). The overall score ranged from 18 to 90 with higher scores indicating more parental stress. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Primary | Change in level of aggressive behaviour in children: Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) 11/2-5 and 6-18, parent-report, sub-scale "Aggressive behaviour" (from the Externalizing Scale) | The CBCL is part of the Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment (ASEBA) and is available for different age ranges, including the targeted range in the present study. For Phase 2, the parent-report versions for children aged 1½-5 and 6-18 are employed. It is the most widely used instrument for assessing child behavioral and emotional symptoms. In addition to the possibility to separate behavioral from emotional symptoms, the CBCL allows for assessment in multiple languages, including Romanian, Russian, and Macedonian. The externalizing subscale raw score ranges from 0 to 48 (CBCL½-5) and 0 to 70 (CBCL6-18) with higher scores indicating more problems. The aggressive behavior subscale belongs to the externalizing scale and assess aggressive behavior (e.g., "Argues a lot"; ; raw score ranges from 0 to 38 in the CBCL ½ - 5 version and 0-36 in the CBCL 6-18 version). Items are rated on a 3-point Likert scale (2 = very true or often true of the child; 0 = not true of the child). | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Primary | Change in frequency of dysfunctional parenting: Parenting Scale (PS) / self-report (shortened version); total score | This measure is widely used in parenting interventions across the world. The scale was designed to explicitly measure dysfunctional discipline practices in parents. Three subscales may be derived (Laxness, Overreactivity, and Verbosity). For phase 2, the subscale Verbosity is excluded due to poor performance in the pilot study, consistent with numerous other studies evaluating this subscale's psychometric properties. Each item is rated on a 7-point Likert Scale in which parents are presented with a situation and then are asked to choose between two alternative responses to a situation (1 = most effective; 7 = most ineffective; i.e., situation: "When I say my child can't do something"). For computation of the subscale scores as well as the total score, the responses on the items are averaged. We will use a modified total score (only from two subscales Laxness & Overreactivity). | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Primary | Change in frequency of positive parenting and effective discipline: Parenting of Young Children Scale (PARYC) / self-report (21 items); continuous total score | Positive parenting behavior will be assessed using parent-report of the Parenting of Young Children Scale (PARYC, 21 items). The PARYC measures the frequency of parent behavior over the previous month. Items are summed to create a total frequency scores parenting behavior as well as for the subscales: positive parenting (7 items, e.g., "how often do you play with your child"), setting limits (7 items, e.g., "how often do you stick to your rules and not change your mind") and proactive parenting (7 items, e.g., "how often do you explain what you want your child to do in clear and simple ways"). This scale has been used in PLH trials in other countries and will allow comparison of results to those studies. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Secondary | Change in level of internalizing problem behavior in children: Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) 11/2-5 (31 items) and 6-18 (32 items) parent-report, Internalizing Scale; continuous sub-scale score | The CBCL is part of the Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment (ASEBA) and is available for different age ranges, including the targeted range in the present study. For the present study, the parent-report versions for children aged 1½ - 5 and 6-18 are employed. It is the most widely used instrument for assessing child behavioral and emotional symptoms. In addition to the possibility to separate behavioral from emotional symptoms, the CBCL allows for assessment in multiple languages, including Romanian (all ages), Russian (all ages), and Macedonian (6-18 version). It is a very well validated instrument that has been used across different prevention and treatment studies. The internalizing subscale raw score ranges from 0 to 62 (CBCL/1 ½ - 5 version) and 0 to 64 (CBCL/ 6 - 18 version) with higher scores indicating more emotional problems. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Secondary | Change in levels of psychological distress in parents: Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales - short version/ self-report (21 items); continuous total score | Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales (DASS) will assess parent-report of psychological distress in parents, a 21-item scale used as a screening tool to measure depression, anxiety, and stress in adults. Caregivers report on the frequency of symptoms in the previous week using a Likert scale (0 = Never, 1 = Sometimes, 2 = Often, 3 = Always; e.g., "I felt that I had nothing to look forward to"). Total DASS scores range from 0 to 63 with subscales from 0 to 21. The DASS is a widely used measure across parenting studies including those of PLH 2-9 and will allow comparison to existing results of intervention studies in non-LMICs. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Secondary | Change in frequency and incidence of child maltreatment: ISPCAN-Child Abuse Screening Tool-Intervention / self-report (16 items); main focus on continuous total score, 2nd question: any effect of intervention on any of the 3 sub-scale scores? | Child maltreatment will be measured using parent report of the ISPCAN Child Abuse Screening Tool-Intervention scale (ICAST-I), an adaptation of a multi-national and consensus-based survey instrument measuring parent-report the incidence and prevalence of child abuse and neglect (ICAST-P). The ICAST-P was validated in 6 LMIC and 7 languages and measures four types of abuse: physical, emotional and sexual abuse, as well as neglect. The response code for the ICAST-I was adapted to a scale from 0 to more than 8 times to assess the frequency of a certain behavior in the past month. This study will assess incidence of child maltreatment by creating dichotomous variables for physical abuse, verbal abuse, and neglect, as well as an overall indication of previous child abuse. We will also assess frequency of overall abuse by summing all of the subscales as well as for each individual subscale. Regarding emotional abuse, a 5-item-version is used. Sexual abuse is not assessed in this phase. | pre; post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019); follow-up: approx. 11 months after pre assessment (January/February 2020) | |
Secondary | RE-AIM Implementation: Quality | PLH-Facilitator Assessment Tool (PLH-FAT): Seven standard behavior categories are grouped into two scales based on the core activities and process skills. Assessment of core activities includes quality of delivery during home activity review, illustrated story discussions, and practicing skills. Assessment of process skills includes modeling skills, collaborative facilitation approach, encouragement of participation, and leadership skills. Assessment by PLH coaches not blind to allocation. | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) | |
Secondary | RE-AIM Reach: Enrolment rate | Number of families who attend at least one session of the program divided by the number of families recruited into the program | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) | |
Secondary | RE-AIM Reach: Participation rate | Mean attendance rate for program sessions based on those families who enrolled in the program (i.e., parents who attended at least one session). Percentage of families who enrolled in the program who attended 50% and 75% or more | post: approx. 7 months after pre assessment (September/October 2019) |
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