Anxiety Clinical Trial
— BAPHYCOfficial title:
Feasibility Study of Empowering Parents Empowering Communities: Being a Parent Helping Your Child With Fears and Worries (BAPHYC)
Emotional disorders are among the most common childhood mental health difficulties. The majority of adult emotional disorders begin before age 14 years. Most children and families across the population do not receive the proven evidence-based interventions available, particularly those from socially disadvantaged neighbourhoods and excluded, Black and Minoritised populations. Families from disadvantaged neighbourhoods, Black and minoritised communities can often feel judged, mistrustful, and blamed for their children's behavioural difficulties making them reluctant to engage in parenting supportEven when available, research shows that over one-third of parents receiving traditional specialist delivered evidence-based parenting do not gain the expected outcomes. Undertaking a group-based parenting intervention to help parents understand and deal with their children's anxiety issues. The aim of this study is to examine the feasibility and acceptability of a new parent-led parenting intervention, being a Parent Helping your Child (BAPHYC) that is intended to improve childhood anxiety and to use the findings to inform the planning and conduct of a definitive randomised control trial. Being a Parent- Helping your Child (BAPHYC) has been developed from two well-established evidence-based parenting programmes. It is a parent-led, group format manualised parenting programme intended to improve childhood anxiety in children aged 5-12 years consisting of eight two-hourly weekly sessions peer-facilitated by two trained parent group leaders. The particants of BAPHYC participants are mothers, fathers and other carers who have principal parenting responsibility for a child with anxiety. The specific study objectives are to: 1. Establish initial evidence about reach and engagement, delivery, acceptability and impact of BAPHYC 2. Establish the feasibility of proposed recruitment pathways and measure completion 3. Acquire a fine grain understanding of parents' experiences of the BAPHYC intervention, research procedures and themes arising from BAPHYC implementation. 4. Assess participant recruitment, engagement, intervention and measure completion, and intervention acceptability rates against a priori feasibility parameters. 5. Obtain data that will be used in future trial recruitment and planning.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 60 |
Est. completion date | July 31, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | March 31, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Parent/ primary caregiver, including non-biological caregiver, for index child aged 5-12 years. - Parent-reported difficulties and concerns in managing anxiety of an index child. In households with more than one child aged 5-12 years, we ask the parents to nominate an index child whose behaviour was of greatest concern. - Parent/ primary caregiver must have proficient written and spoken English. - Parent/ primary must have capacity to provide informed consent to participate. Exclusion Criteria: Families where the parent/ parental caregiver: - The nominated index child of the parent/ primary caregiver has a primary neurodevelopmental condition such as autism, for which parent is likely to require specialist parenting intervention. - The parent / primary caregiver is unable to attend weekly course sessions of the BAPHYC intervention. - The parent / primary caregiver is not living with the index child and is unlikely to have sufficient contact to implement parenting skills acquired during the BAPHYC intervention. |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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King's College London | South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, University of Oxford |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Treatment Acceptability Rating Scale | This 12-item self-report questionnaire (C. Day et al., 2012) uses a 4-point Likert scale to assess, (i) parenting knowledge, skills and confidence acquired (TARS KSC - 4 items yield total score 4-16) and (ii) intervention satisfaction and quality (TARS SQ - 5 items yield total score 5-20). Higher scores indicate greater acceptability and satisfaction. Three free-text items cover helpful and unhelpful participant experience | "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | Concerns About My Child (CAMC) - Change is being assessed | A visual analogue scale that requires parents/caregivers to nominate, prioritise and rate up to three key concerns about their child. An idiographic measure of parental perception of child difficulties, previously used in Being a Parent trial evaluation (C. Day et al., 2012). Parents rate up to three main child emotional and behavioural concerns from 0 (not concerned at all) to 100 (could not be more concerned). Concerns were categorised into five domains: Conduct Problems, Parent-Child Relationship and Communication Difficulties, Self-Regulation, Emotional Distress and Other. The same concerns that are nominated at baseline will be re-rated at follow-up, providing a sensitive, individualised index of change | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | Parenting Scale (PS, 8) - Change is being assessed | An eight-item questionnaire that assesses dysfunctional discipline styles in parents/caregivers of children aged between 2-16 years. There are three subscales: laxness, over-reactivity and hostility. This adapted questionnaire (Kliem et al., 2018) from the Arnold O'Leary Parenting Scale assesses dysfunctional parental discipline styles yields a total score and parental verbosity, over-reactivity and laxness subscales. Lower scores indicate more positive parenting skills | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | Family Accommodation Scale - Anxiety (FASA) - Change is being assessed | This measure consists of 13 items (Lebowitz et al., 2013). The first 9 items assess the frequency of accommodations and are summed for the total accommodation score. Four additional items assess parental distress associated with accommodation (1 item), and children's short-term responses to not being accommodated (3 items). Items are rated on a 5-point scale of 0 to 4 ('Never' to 'Daily'). Total 9-item family accommodation scores range from 0 to 36, with higher scores indicating more accommodation | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | My Parenting Goals (MPG) - Change is being assessed | An idiographic measure of up to two personal parenting goals, using a visual analogue scale from 0 (could not be further from achieving my goal) to 100 (goal completely achieved), (C. Day et al., 2012) | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | Short Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (SWEMWBS) - Change is being assessed | A seven-item parent wellbeing measure each rated on a 5-point Likert scale (Tennant et al., 2007). High scores represent greater mental wellbeing. SWEMWBS is sensitive to change, and the full version has been used in evaluations of parenting programmes. It had good internal consistency, a= .85. Raw SWEMWBS scores will be transformed to allow comparisons with national survey data | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" | |
Other | Goal Based Outcomes (GBO) - Changes is being assessed | This measure compares how far a person feels they have moved towards reaching a goal that they have set for themselves at the beginning of an intervention (Law, 2015.). GBOs are simply a way of deciding at the beginning of an intervention where you want to head for, and to track progress along the way, or at the end to see how far along your agreed track you have managed to get. Goal setting should occur over the first three sessions of the intervention/assessment. Each goal is given an identity number (from one to three). Once a goal is agreed, how close the respondent feels they are to reaching the goal is recorded at time one. At the end of the intervention record again how close to reaching the goal at time 2. The rating is recorded on a scale from zero to ten where 'zero' means the goal is not met in any way, 'ten' means the goal is met completely and a rating of 'five' means they are halfway to reaching the goal. | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "up to nine weeks" | |
Primary | Child Anxiety Impact Scale for Parents - change is being assessed | A 27-item parent-report measure assessing the impact of anxiety symptoms on the psychosocial functioning of children and adolescents (Langley, Bergman, McCracken, & Piacentini, 2004). It provides a quantitative measure of anxiety related functional impairment related to specific situations from multiple psychosocial domains (School, Social, Home/Family). It was designed as both a baseline measure and to evaluate treatment response. The respondents are asked to rate how much difficulty the child has had completing each activity due to his or her anxiety symptoms during the last month. Each item is scored on a 4-point Likert scale ("0" not at all, "1" just a little, "2" pretty much, "3" very much). Sum of subscales, or overall total score of the scale | "baseline, pre-intervention/procedure/surgery" and "immediately after the intervention/procedure/surgery" |
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