Domestic Violence Clinical Trial
— SafeUnderstoodOfficial title:
Cluster Randomized Trial of Embedded Dyadic Mother-child and Father-focused Intervention for Preventing Recurrence of Maltreatment and Reducing Impairment in Young Children Exposed to Domestic Violence
The current cluster randomized trial examines the efficacy of embedding two different
parenting interventions within child protection services for young children (0 to 4) who
have been exposed to domestic violence and who are at moderate to high risk for recurrent
experiences of maltreatment. Interventions are "embedded" in recognition of the significant
role played by child protection case workers in identifying families in need of
intervention, referring/engaging families in intervention, and being able to use information
resulting from intervention (e.g., reports from the intervention program, observations of
parenting behaviour changes made as a result of intervention) to improve decision-making in
their child protection practice. Thus in this trial, ongoing child protection case workers
for families are randomly assigned to receive professional development training, supervision
support, and priority client access to parenting interventions in the following four
conditions: a) embedded mother-child dyadic intervention (Mothers in Mind); b) embedded
fathering intervention (Caring Dads); c) both mother-child dyadic and fathering
intervention; d) service as usual.
Mothers in Mind (MIM) is a dyadic mother-child intervention aimed at preventing child
impairment resulting from exposure to domestic violence. Intervention focuses on increasing
mothers' awareness of the impact that exposure to family violence/trauma may have had on
their infants and themselves as mothers, helping identify and promote positive parenting
skills such as sensitivity and responsiveness to infant needs, promoting parental competence
and emotional closeness and decreasing mothers' social isolation. Mothers in Mind uses an
attachment and trauma-informed psycho-educational process approach in 12 weekly sessions (10
group and 2 individual).
Caring Dads (CD) aims to prevent recurrence of child exposure to domestic violence by
intervening with fathers. Caring Dads includes 15 group sessions, an individual intake, and
two individual sessions to set and monitor specific behaviour change goals. Major aspects of
innovation in the Caring Dads program include the use of a motivational approach to engage
and retain men in intervention, consistent emphasis on the need to end violence against
children's mothers alongside of improving fathering; program content addressing
accountability for past abuse; focus on promoting child-centered fathering over developing
child management skills; and a model of collaborative practice with child protection.
Hypotheses are posed for differential outcomes among child protection workers (level of
randomization) and for children who are the subject of the child protection referral (nested
within workers). At the level of the individual child (primary outcome) it is hypothesized
that there will be lower rates of re-referral for children of families on the caseloads of
child protection workers assigned to the embedded CD, MIM and combined intervention than for
those on the caseloads of workers in the service as usual condition. At the worker level
(secondary outcomes), outcomes are hypothesized in two areas: 1) worker skill in
conceptualizing risk and need in cases of child exposure to domestic violence and 2)
increased self-efficacy for referring to and collaborating with embedded interventions.
Specifically, we hypothesized that following training and at 12-month follow-up, workers in
the CD/MIM intervention and combined CD and MIM condition will have greater case
conceptualization skills in responding to hypothetical cases as compared to workers in the
treatment as usual condition. We further hypothesize that assignment to an intervention
condition will lead workers to report greater self-efficacy for collaborating with embedded
parenting interventions than workers in the treatment as usual condition post-training and
at 12-months follow-up.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 200 |
Est. completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | December 31, 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A to 75 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Did the intake process substantiate child exposure to domestic violence as a primary or secondary code (Yes) - Was the child's father (biological, step, or common-law) identified as a perpetrator of this abuse(need not be exclusive perpetrator)? (Yes) - Is at least one of the investigated children four years old or younger (yes for MIM comparison)? - Does the maltreated child reside with his or her mother or father or with his or her mother with ongoing regular contact with his/her father? (Yes) - Are there continuing and insufficiently addressed concerns about the potential recurrence of domestic violence by father (Yes) - Are there continuing and insufficiently addressed concerns about problems in the mother-child relationship? (Yes) Exclusion Criteria: - The child's mother and father are unable to communicate in English - Given the opportunity, this father could not participate in a group-based intervention (reasons are documented. Examples would be severe mental health/substance use issues, severe problems with cognitive functioning, a work schedule that requires him to be regularly out of the region) - Given the opportunity, this mother could not participate in a group-based intervention? (reasons are documented. Examples would be severe mental health/substance use issues, severe problems with cognitive functioning, inability to arrange with work schedule) |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | Child Welfare Institute | Toronto | Ontario |
Canada | University of Toronto | Toronto | Ontario |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Toronto | Child Development Institute, Children's Aid Society of Toronto Child Welfare Institute |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Recurrence of abuse | Substantiated re-referral to child protective services for child maltreatment (any form). | 2 years | |
Secondary | Workers' case conceptualization of the risks/needs of mothers | Assessed via worker response to hypothetical vignettes (A, B and C) typical of cases of child exposure to DV given to workers in randomly assigned order. Each vignette is followed by three questions: Identify the risks to the child; Create an intervention plan for the family; and How would you know when this case should be closed? Scoring criteria for vignettes were developed on the basis of the responses of six experts. The number and nature of expert identified risks (9 to 10), needs (5 to 6), and indicators for closure (4 to 6) vary across the mother and father domains and across vignettes. For each identified item, workers will be assigned a score of 0 (not identified or mentioned), 1 (identified or mentioned but not clearly conceptualized) or 2 (well conceptualized) by raters blind to intervention status, summed across items, and standardized to allow direct comparisons. | Average of 14 months post-assignment | |
Secondary | Workers' case conceptualization of the risks/needs of fathers | Assessed via worker response to hypothetical vignettes (A, B and C) typical of cases of child exposure to DV given to workers in randomly assigned order. Each vignette is followed by three questions: Identify the risks to the child; Create an intervention plan for the family; and How would you know when this case should be closed? Scoring criteria for vignettes were developed on the basis of the responses of six experts. The number and nature of expert identified risks (9 to 10), needs (5 to 6), and indicators for closure (4 to 6) vary across the mother and father domains and across vignettes. For each identified item, workers will be assigned a score of 0 (not identified or mentioned), 1 (identified or mentioned but not clearly conceptualized) or 2 (well conceptualized) by raters blind to intervention status, summed across items, and standardized to allow direct comparisons. | Average of 14 months post-assignment | |
Secondary | Workers' efficacy for using embedded parenting interventions with mothers | 10-item self-report likert scale with each item rated from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree). Example items include: "I am confident that I know when I have the skills to help mothers myself and when a referral to a more specialized service is necessary"; "When I refer a mother to intervention, I have specific idea(s) of the changes that I want to see her make" and "I feel like I have a range of ideas about what to do when mothers seem to be "failing" in intervention". Total score for self-efficacy in using embedded parenting intervention with mothers will be created by averaging across items. | Average of 14 months post-assignment | |
Secondary | Workers' efficacy for using embedded parenting interventions with fathers | 10-item self-report likert scale with each item rated from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree). Example items include: "I am confident that I know when I have the skills to help fathers myself and when a referral to a more specialized service is necessary"; "When I refer a father to intervention, I have specific idea(s) of the changes that I want to see her make" and "I feel like I have a range of ideas about what to do when fathers seem to be "failing" in intervention". Total score for self-efficacy in using embedded parenting intervention with fathers will be created by averaging across items. | Average of 14 months post-assignment | |
Secondary | Child social and emotional development (Ages & Stages Questionnaires-Social Emotional (ASQ-SE), 2nd Ed) | Children's caregivers (mothers and/or fathers) will compete the ASQ-SE to assess young children's social and emotional development. Questionnaire items are age specific for children 6 months to 5.5 years of age with stages that focus on tasks related to attachment (0-12 months), autonomy and self-development (12-20 months), and establishing peer relationships (30 months-7 years). Specific behavioral domains addressed include: self-regulation, compliance, communication, adaptive behaviors, autonomy, affect, and interaction with people. Each item is rated on a three point scale "most of the time", "some of the time", or "rarely" and summed to create an overall social and emotional development score. | Average of 12 months |
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