Parent-Child Relations Clinical Trial
— PriCAREOfficial title:
Pilot Evaluation of Enhanced Child Adult Relationship Enhancement in Pediatric Primary Care (PriCARE) Intervention
Verified date | March 2023 |
Source | Children's Hospital of Philadelphia |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of the enhanced PriCARE intervention in improving parenting capacity, decreasing child behavior problems, and reducing risk of child maltreatment at several primary care clinics in Philadelphia and 2 primary care clinics in North Carolina.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 238 |
Est. completion date | August 4, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | June 22, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 2 Years to 6 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Caregiver is 18 years or older - Caregiver is English speaking - Caregiver is legal guardian of child and provides informed consent - Caregiver has cellular phone with text messaging capacity - Caregiver is available for scheduled times PriCARE hosts groups - Child is 2-6 years old - Caregiver must have the appropriate technological tools and access to participate when in-person sessions are not available - Child attends one of the CHOP primary care sites in Pennsylvania or one of two University of North Carolina (UNC Children's Primary Care and UNC Pediatrics at Panther Creek) primary care sites Exclusion Criteria: - Caregiver has already completed the PriCARE program - Child has already received a behavioral health diagnosis or is already receiving individualized behavior health therapy or associated medication for Oppositional Defiance Disorder, Conduct Disorder, or Attention- Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder - Child is being evaluated for or has been diagnosed with autism - Child has a cognitive age less than 2 years old as determined by screening questions and/or the referring clinician. - Child has caused physical injuries, such as bruises or cuts, more than once and on purpose to their caregiver, him/herself, or other children or people |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of North Carolina | Chapel Hill | North Carolina |
United States | Children's Hospital of Philadelphia | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia | Annie E. Casey Foundation, The Pew Charitable Trusts |
United States,
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* Note: There are 33 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Change in the Parenting Scale (PS) score from time 2 to time 3 | Change in PS from time 2 to time 3 will be measured in the subset of CHOP participants completing the Positive Discipline Module. PS is a 30-item questionnaire that assesses dysfunctional parenting discipline strategies. Participants respond to various hypothetical situations with a 7-point Likert scale, where 7 is the "ineffective" end of the scale and a lower overall score indicates more effective parenting. There are 3 scale factors: 1) laxness, 2) over-reactivity, and 3) verbosity. Some items are unrelated to any of these 3 factors. The 11 Laxness items relate to permissive discipline, lack of rule reinforcement and providing positive consequences for misbehaviors. The 10 Over-Reactivity items reflect anger, irritability or meanness. The 7 Verbosity items suggest longer verbal responses such as talking when talking is ineffective. All item responses are averaged to compute the total score. Each factors' items are averaged to compute the factor scores. | 8-17 weeks (time 2) to 16-30 weeks (time 3) | |
Other | Change in the Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI) score from time 2 to time 3 | Change in ECBI scores from time 2 to time 3 will be measured in the subset of CHOP participants completing the Positive Discipline Module. The ECBI is a parent rating scale designed to measure conduct problem behaviors in children ages 2-16 years old. The instrument contains 36 items that assess behavior on two scales. The problem scale provides a yes/no problem identification rating for each item, and the sum of yes responses yields a problem score with a potential range from 0 to 36 with a clinical cutoff of 15. The intensity scale provides a frequency-of-occurrence rating for each item, ranging from never (1) to always (7) and the ratings are summed to yield an intensity score with a potential range from 36 to 252 with a clinical cutoff of 131. Higher scores indicate worse outcomes. | 8-17 weeks (time 2), 16-30 weeks (time 3) | |
Other | Change in the Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding (DPICS) score from time 2 to time 3 | Change in DPICS scores from time 2 to time 3 will be measured in the subset of CHOP participants completing the Positive Discipline Module. Each dyad is observed in 3 standard situations that involve varying levels of parental control and display dyadic interactions targeted by PriCARE: child-led play, caregiver-led play, clean-up. The coding manual has definitions, examples, and guidelines for deciding how to code the 24 standard caregiver and child behaviors. The interactions are video-recorded and coded by a blinded research assistant. Zero, or not observed, is the minimum for all behaviors. The total score is the sum of the coded behaviors within each category, thus there is no set maximum. A second research assistant re-codes 25% of randomly selected videos to check for coding reliability. Reliability will be assessed using % agreement, intraclass correlations, and Cohen's kappa. Comparing pre- and post-intervention videos will demonstrate caregiver and child behavior changes. | 8-17 weeks (time 2), 16-30 weeks (time 3) | |
Other | Therapeutic Attitudes Inventory (TAI) at time 3 | The investigators will assess caregivers' perceptions of the efficacy of PriCARE on improving parenting skills and child behavior as measured by the TAI at time 3 for the subset of participants completing the Positive Discipline Module. The TAI is a brief 10-question satisfaction measure of parent training and parent-child treatments. Questions are answered on a 5-point Likert scale with 1 indicating the lowest ("nothing", "much worse than before", "much less confident", etc.) and 5 indicating the highest ("very many useful techniques", "very much better than before", "more confident", etc.). Responses are added together and greater TAI total scores indicate greater levels of participant satisfaction. The potential scores range from 10-50. | 16-30 weeks (time 3) | |
Other | Change in the Child Abuse Potential Inventory (CAPI) score from baseline to time 2 to time 3 | CAPI change scores from time 2 to 3 will be measured in subjects participating in the Positive Discipline Module. CAPI, a 160-item survey, measures traits & parenting styles typical of known physical child abusers. Each item has a weighted value based on if agree vs. disagree is chosen and then the values are summed. Child physical abuse scores range from 0-486 with higher scores indicating the caregiver has traits similar to those of known child abusers and has a higher risk of abuse. Ranges for factor scales are: distress (0-261), rigidity (0-64), unhappiness (0-69), problems with child and self (0-30), problems with family (0-38), problems with others (0-24) Higher factor scores imply higher symptom levels. Three validity scales and ranges are: lie (0-18), random (0-18), inconsistency (0-20). Ego-strength score ranges from 0-40 with higher score indicating more emotional stability. Loneliness score ranges from 0-15; higher score means more isolation. | 8-17 weeks (time 2), 16-30 weeks (time 3) | |
Primary | Change in the Parenting Scale (PS) score from time 1 to time 2 | The primary objective of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of the enhanced PriCARE program to improve parenting capacity as measured by the Parenting Scale (PS), a 30-item questionnaire that assesses dysfunctional parenting discipline strategies. Participants respond to various hypothetical situations with a 7-point Likert scale, where 7 is the "ineffective" end of the scale and a lower overall score indicates more effective parenting. There are 3 scale factors: 1) laxness, 2) over-reactivity, and 3) verbosity. Some items are unrelated to any of these 3 factors. The 11 Laxness items relate to permissive discipline, lack of rule reinforcement and providing positive consequences for misbehaviors. The 10 Over-Reactivity items reflect anger, irritability or meanness. The 7 Verbosity items suggest longer verbal responses such as talking when talking is ineffective. All item responses are averaged to compute the total score. Each factors' items are averaged to compute the factor scores | Baseline (time 1), 8-17 weeks (time 2) | |
Secondary | Change in the Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI) score from time 1 to time 2 | The investigators will assess the efficacy of the enhanced PriCARE on decreasing caregiver-reported child behavior problems as measured by the ECBI. The ECBI is a parent rating scale designed to measure conduct problem behaviors in children ages 2-16 years old. The instrument contains 36 items that assess behavior on two scales. The problem scale provides a yes/no problem identification rating for each item, and the sum of yes responses yields a problem score with a potential range from 0 to 36 with a clinical cutoff of 15. The intensity scale provides a frequency-of-occurrence rating for each item, ranging from never (1) to always (7) and the ratings are summed to yield an intensity score with a potential range from 36 to 252 with a clinical cutoff of 131. Higher scores indicate worse outcomes. | Baseline (time 1), 8-17 weeks (time 2) | |
Secondary | Change in the Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding (DPICS) score from time 1 to time 2 | Investigators will assess the efficacy of enhanced PriCARE on impacting the quality of the caregiver-child relationship with the DPICS. Each dyad is observed in 3 standard situations that involve varying levels of parental control and display dyadic interactions targeted by PriCARE: child-led play, caregiver-led play, clean-up. The coding manual has definitions, examples, and guidelines for deciding how to code the 24 standard caregiver and child behaviors. The interactions are video-recorded and coded by a blinded research assistant. Zero, or not observed, is the minimum for all behaviors. The total score is the sum of the coded behaviors within each category, thus there is no set maximum. A second research assistant re-codes 25% of randomly selected videos to check for coding reliability. Reliability will be assessed using % agreement, intraclass correlations, and Cohen's kappa. Comparing pre- and post-intervention videos will demonstrate caregiver and child behavior changes. | Baseline (time 1), 8-17 weeks (time 2) | |
Secondary | Change in the Child Abuse Potential Inventory (CAPI) score from time 1 to time 2 | CAPI change scores from time 1 to time 2 will be measured. CAPI, a 160-item survey, measures traits & parenting styles typical of known physical child abusers. Each item has a weighted value based on if agree vs. disagree is chosen and then the values are summed. Child physical abuse scores range from 0-486 with higher scores indicating caregiver has traits similar to those of known child abusers and has a higher risk of abuse. Ranges for factor scales are: distress (0-261), rigidity (0-64), unhappiness (0-69), problems with child and self (0-30), problems with family (0-38), problems with others (0-24) Higher factor scores imply higher symptom levels. Three validity scales and ranges are: lie (0-18), random (0-18), inconsistency (0-20). Ego-strength score ranges from 0-40 with higher score indicating more emotional stability. Loneliness score ranges from 0-15; higher score means more isolation. | Baseline (time 1), 8-17 weeks (time 2) | |
Secondary | Therapeutic Attitudes Inventory (TAI) | The investigators will assess caregivers' perceptions of the efficacy of PriCARE on improving parenting skills and child behavior as measured by the TAI. The TAI is a brief 10-question satisfaction measure of parent training and parent-child treatments. Questions are answered on a 5-point Likert scale with 1 indicating the lowest ("nothing", "much worse than before", "much less confident", etc.) and 5 indicating the highest ("very many useful techniques", "very much better than before", "more confident", etc.). Responses are added together and greater TAI total scores indicate greater levels of participant satisfaction. The potential scores range from 10-50. | 8-17 weeks (time 2) |
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