Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05445141
Other study ID # VR Dnr: 2021-06447
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date August 1, 2022
Est. completion date March 2025

Study information

Verified date March 2024
Source Karolinska Institutet
Contact Anna Edenius
Phone +46704050612
Email anna.edenius-ekback@ki.se
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Society can promote children's mental health at an early stage by creating good conditions with, for example, general parental support programs that are offered to all parents. One program that has been developed is called All Children in Focus (ACF) [in Swedish: Alla Barn i Centrum (ABC)] which has been evaluated for parents with children aged 3-12 years. The results showed effects on parenting ability, parenting strategies and on children's well-being. Staff in child health care (CHC), a natural arena for parental support programs reaching almost all families, have requested modifications in the program ACF to involve parents with younger children. The parent groups offered within CHC today are not evaluated in younger children and could be thus replaced by researched parental support based on evidence. The investigators therefore want to study the effects of a modified version of ACF for parents of children 1-2 years (Little ACF) to see if Little ACF can strengthen parenting ability and have effects on children's social and emotional development. Parents within CHC are asked to participate and are randomly assigned to Little ACF or the regular CHC program plus a lecture. Little ACF is offered during four group meetings and potential effects are measured with questionnaires. Measurements are made before randomisation, during and after participation in Little ACF. Children's behavior is followed up at 3 years through questionnaires and CHC documentation. The study can provide important knowledge about how Little ACF can promote children's mental health and strengthen parents. The investigators see it as a strength that Little ACF is based on research and on dialogue with parents and professionals. Little ACF, which is aimed at everyone, can form a basis for identifying families and children who need preventive and treatment measures.


Description:

Promotion of mental health is an important topic and early interventions may be the most cost-effective investment for the society. The Child Health Care (CHC) in Sweden reaches 99% of parents with infants and is the society's major promotive support during the first years of life. All Children in Focus (ACF) [in Swedish: Alla Barn i Centrum (ABC)] is a universal program aiming to support positive parental strategies and promote child well-being. ACF has shown positive effects for parental efficacy and strategies and for child well-being at age 3-12 years. In this 3-year project the investigators aim to gain knowledge about how ACF given to parents with children 1-2 years (Little ACF) may influence parenting and child well-being. Specific research questions are how Little ACF in comparison to care as usual (CAU) within CHC can: - strengthen strategies of emotional regulation in parents, - promote parenting practices, - promote child well-being - lead to reduction of child behavior problems (externalizing/internalizing), - engage and retain parents in groups? Parents with infants of 12-24 months that are registered at any of the included CHC centers in Stockholm, Gotland and mid-Sweden will be asked for participation. Recruitment will be performed at the ordinary 10-, 12- or 18-months visits of the child. The CHC nurse will ask parent/s for participation verbally and parents will be provided the information and consent form and a pamphlet about the study. Parents who are interested in participating will be sent a link via email with the same information and consent form that can be signed digitally. Thereafter they will be sent the questionnaire. When the CHC nurse has recruited twice as many parents as a full Little ACF group, the researchers will randomize the parents into the two groups, one receiving the intervention Little ACF and the other a control group receiving CAU and digital lectures. The CHC nurse will notify the parents about which group they have been randomized to and a description on how the study will proceed. A previous randomized study of ACF (aimed at parents with children 3-12 years) showed an effect size (Cohen's d) of 0.30 for parental self-efficacy. Since this study compares Little ACF with CAU including lectures (instead of waiting list), a marginally smaller effect (d = 0.25) between the groups is expected. With a significance level of 95% (p-value 0.05) and a power of 80%, it would thus be needed 251 participants in each group. A drop-out rate of 25% is expected, which means that a total of 670 families would need to be included. Each Little ACF group will consist of parents of 5-7 children, which means that about 60-70 groups will be needed and thus a total of 25 group leader pairs if each pair leads three groups. The pair of group leaders consist of one CHC nurse and one social worker or other profession with experience of working with parents of young children. Group leaders will be provided a training containing theory, practical exercises, and supervision. The training is spread out over three occasions taking place every other week to allow for the possibility to start Little ACF groups in between the training sessions. After the training, the group leaders will be offered monthly group supervision. Effects of Little ACF on positive parenting and strategies are assessed through parental questionnaires distributed digitally to be completed independently by the parents. Child well-being is measured through parental questionnaires and data in CHC records. CHC nurses will be invited to semi-structured interviews to gain a better knowledge in how the experience of Little ACF affect daily work at CHC. Quantitative data will be analyzed statistically with linear regression models and qualitative data will be analyzed using thematic analysis. This study adds to the evidence of promotion during infancy and give information if Little ACF is effective for parents and young children. It may also reduce needs of future interventions of mental health problems.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 670
Est. completion date March 2025
Est. primary completion date March 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group N/A and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Parents of children in the age of 1-2 years that are registered at the CHCs included in the study Exclusion Criteria: - Parents in need of interpreter will be excluded

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Little ACF [in Swedish: Lilla ABC]
Little ACF is a modified version of the program called All Children in Focus [in Swedish: Alla Barn i Centrum (ABC)] that originally is developed for parents with children 3-12 years of age. The content is based on positive developmental psychology and involves role plays, discussions and exercises to try at home with the child. Printed material will be provided to the parents at each meeting/session. Little ACF is offered once a week during four weeks. Each session is 60 minutes, thereafter the parents can stay in the facility for 30 minutes to continue discussing with each other.
Lectures
The lectures are pre-recorded and available during four weeks. Each lecture is 10 minutes and the content is similar to, but more superficial than, the content in Little ACF.

Locations

Country Name City State
Sweden Central Child Health Care (Centrala barnhälsovården) Stockholm

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Karolinska Institutet Region Stockholm, The Swedish Research Council

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Sweden, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in parental self-efficacy from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured with the "Tool to Measure Parenting Self-Efficacy" - TOPSE (Bloomfield & Kendall, 2012), with 48 statements that are to be answered to on a 11 point scale, from 0=not agree to 10=fully agree At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5))
Primary Change in parent emotion regulation from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured with the "Parent Emotion Regulation Scale" - PERS (Pereira et al., 2017). The scale has 20 statements that should be rated on a 5-point scale, from 1=never or almost never to 5=always or almost always. At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5))
Primary Change in coping with the negative emotions of the child from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured using "Coping with Toddlers' Negative Emotion Scale" - CTNES (Spinrad et al, 2007), the scale has 12 scenarios with 7 options each on how a parent would react that to that specific scenario (Distress reactions, Punitive reactions, Expressive encouragement, Emotion-focused reactions, Problem-focused reactions, Minimization reactions and Granting wish reactions), the parent are asked to rate how likely s/he is to react in that specific manner from 1 = very unlikely to 7 = very likely, the higher the score the more likely to use that coping mechanism. At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5))
Primary Change in parental stress from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured using the scales (1) incompetence, (2) social isolation and (3) role restriction from the "Swedish Parenting Stress Questionnaire" - SPSQ (Östberg, Hagekull & Wettergren, 1997), the scale is from 1 to 5 indicating 'Strongly disagree' to 'Strongly agree', the total possible score is 170 and higher scores indicate higher stress. At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5))
Primary Change in coparenting relationship from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured using 5 items from "The Coparenting Relationship Scale" (Feinberg et al., 2012), to be answered with a 5 point scale from 1=not agree to 5=fully agree At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5))
Secondary Change in childrens' social and emotional development from baseline to four different time points: directly after the intervention, after 6 months, 12 months and when the child is 3 years old. Will be measured using "Ages & Stages Questionnaires - Socio-Emotional Second Edition" (ASQ: SE-2; Singh et al., 2017) At five occations: baseline (T1), directly after the intervention (T2), after 6 months (T3), 12 months (T4) and in relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5), expected effect at T3, T4 and T5
Secondary Psychological and behavioural problems Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ; Theunissen et al., 2013) that is being sent out before the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age and that is registered in CSAM Health Analytics (medical record system at CHC). In relation to the child's visit to CHC at 3 years of age (T5), expected effect at T5
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05702086 - Making SPARX Fly in Nunavut: Pilot Testing an E-intervention for Boosting Resilience Against Youth Depression N/A
Completed NCT05684614 - Interoception and Emotion Regulation
Completed NCT05376397 - Testing THRIVE 365 for Black Sexual Minority Men (On The Daily) N/A
Completed NCT04110548 - Emotion and Craving Regulation Among Individuals With Internet Gaming Disorders N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05558527 - The Social Regulation of Threat-related Vigilance and Arousal N/A
Recruiting NCT03039387 - Effects of tDCS on Cognitive Control and Emotion Regulation in Depressed Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT06024083 - Skills Video Intervention for Chinese/Chinese Americans N/A
Recruiting NCT05949047 - Smartphone-based Cognitive Emotion Regulation Training for Unpaid Primary Caregivers of Persons With Alzheimer's Disease N/A
Recruiting NCT05867316 - Supplementing Brief Psychotherapy With a Mobile App N/A
Recruiting NCT05656001 - Neuro- and Biofeedback in Nonsuicidal Self-injury N/A
Recruiting NCT06033053 - Real-time Neurofeedback Training of Fronto-limbic Regions Functional Connectivity N/A
Recruiting NCT05390034 - Improving Emotion Regulation Flexibility: Testing the Efficacy of an Emotion Regulation Program in College Students N/A
Recruiting NCT06432959 - Incorporating Positive Affect Promoting Activities Into Cognitive Behavioral Therapies N/A
Recruiting NCT06049407 - Intervention on Socio-emotional Development and Well-being Through ICTs in Early Adulthood N/A
Recruiting NCT05131425 - Facing Your Fears: Adolescents With ASD and Intellectual Disability N/A
Completed NCT04999514 - Examining the Effects of Parenting Interventions on Children With Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) and Their Parents N/A
Completed NCT05149066 - #KindGirlsInACTion: A Programme for the Promotion of Mental Health of Female Adolescents N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05264415 - Intergenerational Transmission of Traumatic Stress N/A
Recruiting NCT06458920 - Social Facilitation of Emotion Regulation in Adolescence N/A
Completed NCT03698591 - Testing a Neurocognitive Model of Distancing Using Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. N/A