Stress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Parent Supports Intervention Project for Parents of Adults With Developmental Disabilities
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of two community based interventions for
parents of adults with intellectual or developmental disabilities (IDD) who are requesting
services.
The two interventions will include:
1. Support and Information Intervention - provides parents with support and information
about services for their sons and daughters
2. Mindfulness Intervention - empowers parents through teaching them mindfulness skills
We hypothesize that:
1. Parents in both types of interventions will report benefits (reductions in
psychological distress) maintained at follow-up.
2. Parents in mindfulness intervention group will report improvements in mindful
parenting, self compassion, positive gain, empowerment, and reduced burden. Parents in
support and information intervention group will report improvements in empowerment,
positive gain, and reduced burden.
3. Parents in mindfulness intervention group will show greater improvements by 3 months
follow-up than parents in the support and information group.
Parents report many positive dimensions of raising a child with IDD, yet at the same time,
being a parent to an individual with IDD is associated with increased stress and poorer
psychological wellbeing. Through the MAPS (see www.mapsresearch.ca) program, we have been
studying the experience of parents of adults with IDD to better understand what contributes
to their difficulties, and factors associated with their wellbeing. This research, combined
with our recent systematic review on the experience of parents needing services, highlights
the need for psychological supports to empower parents and to enhance their ability to care
for their children. With the appropriate psychological supports, parents may be able to
support their sons/daughters for longer. It is crucial that we invest in researching
interventions and promising practices that may enhance the capacity of parents. However,
limited research has considered what types of support make a difference in parental
well-being.
Parent empowerment, mindfulness and psychological acceptance are key psychological variables
related to positive parent outcomes, including the ability to more effectively care for
others. Parent empowerment refers to active attempts to change situations through the
application of knowledge and skill. Empowerment is possible when parents feel more familiar
with services, and more able to advocate and plan for their child. Person directed planning,
orientation to services, practical tips and planning are all helpful for empowerment.
Psychological acceptance is a process that involves embracing current difficulties without
actively attempting to directly change them, thus facilitating positive action in line with
an individual's or family's values. Such acceptance can be particularly helpful for parents
when stressful events cannot be immediately resolved or addressed.
Mindfulness is related to psychological acceptance, and is defined as the awareness that
emerges through paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, nonjudgementally to the
unfolding of experience moment by moment. These latter processes may help parents preserve
their emotional energy and reduce those thoughts, attitudes and judgments that can interfere
with addressing their needs and the needs of their child. In this way, we expect that
increasing psychological acceptance and mindfulness will facilitate parental and family
empowerment. Mindfulness is an innovative support that shows particular promise because it
may serve to strengthen parent capacity to care in times of stress, may fundamentally alter
how parents spend time with their children, and it may help to make parents more effective
advocates for their children. There is an emerging evidence base demonstrating the benefits
of mindfulness and acceptance based interventions for a host of medical and psychological
issues. Recent attention has been paid to teaching mindfulness to caregivers to help them
with caregiving. Studies have included caregivers of patients with cancer, adults with
dementia, youth with behavioural difficulties, and most recently, children with IDD.
Preliminary research from the UK and the US has demonstrated the benefits that mindfulness
based interventions have on parent ability to care for their young children and youth with
IDD. Singh and colleagues published case series teaching parents of children with IDD the
philosophy and practice of mindfulness. These papers demonstrated that with 12 training
sessions, parents reported decreases in child behaviour problems and increased parenting
satisfaction. Blackledge and Hayes applied Acceptance and Commitment Therapy to a group of
20 parents of youth with autism and demonstrated significant improvement in general
distress, depression, and maternal acceptance immediately following the therapy as well as 3
months later.
Most recently, Dykens and colleagues demonstrated improved mood and reductions in in a
cohort of 287 parents of children with IDD participating in Mindfulness Based Stress
Reduction in Tennessee, compared to parents participating in a Positive Psychology Support
Program. Neece and colleagues reported similar improvements in a group of 100 parents with
preschool age children with IDD in California. Most impressive in both studies was the high
attendance rate of parents, attributed in part to onsite childcare. A similar group, using a
modification of Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), developed by team member Zindel
Segal and colleagues is currently being evaluated in Wales by team member Richard Hastings
and colleagues.
We will evaluate the impact of two community based interventions for parents of adults with
IDD who are requesting services. The first intervention is considered current best practice
(active control), which will offer parents support and information about services to enhance
parent empowerment ("support and information for parents"). This will be compared to an
intervention that will target both parent empowerment and psychological
acceptance/mindfulness by blending parent support with mindfulness training ("mindfulness
intervention for parents"). The idea of adding a psychological intervention to a more
practical intervention has been explored in mindfulness research previously and also in the
parent training literature more generally. We will compare this intervention to an "active
control" so that we can determine the unique contribution of the mindfulness component of
the intervention.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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