Parenting Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial of the Efficacy of Triple P (Positive Parenting Program) Seminar Series as a Universal Parenting Intervention for the Prevention of Emotional and Behavioural Difficulties in Greek Children Aged 2 to 12.
This study investigates the impact of a Triple P Seminar Series on positive parenting for universal prevention of behavioural and emotional difficulties in a general Greek sample of parents with children aged 2 to 12. It is predicted that, compared to an attention control condition, parents randomised to the Seminar Series will report lower levels of children's disruptive and emotional difficulties at post-intervention. At the same time, it is postulated that parents will show a decrease in dysfunctional discipline styles, greater feelings of self-efficacy as well as lower levels of distress. Lastly, it is hypothesized that the effects observed at post-intervention will remain at the 6-month follow-up.
Phase 1: Recruitment Child and family organisations will invite the general public by
advertising the study through the organisations' member lists, contacts with schools and
other health institutions, social networks, and mass media. Parents who have at least a
child between 2 to 12 years old, living in the general area of Attica and being available to
attend three Seminars (once per month) will be eligible. The researcher will receive from
the organisations the list of all parents who contacted them and were interested in taking
part in the study; the list will then be shared with his assistant. The assistant will sign
a subcontract. All parents will receive an envelope which includes: (1) a thank you letter;
(2) participant information sheet and two informed consents; (3) the pre-assessment baseline
booklet including background information, parenting and child measures; (4) a pre-paid
envelope so they could easily return them.
Written-informed consent: Eligible adult participants will provide informed consent. The
adult informed consent process involves presenting a detailed written description of the
study as it is described on the printed information and consent forms. Participants will be
informed of the procedures for ensuring their protection, including:
1. participation is voluntary and free of charge;
2. participants will be informed that they will have an equal chance to get the Seminar
Series through a fair process;
3. participants will be informed that their personal contact details will be shared with
the researcher and his assistant;
4. the questionnaires which will be distributed are not anonymous. This is because all
questionnaires will be distributed by mail;
5. the confidentiality of participants' personal data will be guaranteed though specific
procedures to protect their anonymity: (a) all information provided will remain
strictly confidential; (b) participants' names and other identifiers will not be
written on any transcriptions or other research data; (c) unique non-personally
identifying ID numbers instead of names on research materials will be used. This code
will be placed on the survey and other collected data. Through an identification key,
the researcher's assistant will be able to link records to participants' identity; and
(d) data will maintained in locked computer databases, and participants study files,
video and audio tapes of the Seminars in locked filing cabinets in locked rooms; (e)
only the researcher, his assistant and the researcher's supervisor will have access to
the data; (f) at the end of the project all information, including the video and audio
tapes of the first 3 Seminars will be in locked cabinets at the researcher's office and
all databases, audio and video files will be stored to his computer for future academic
research and/or training of other health professionals; a password will be required for
access to the databases. After focus group transcription the video and audio tapes of
focus groups will be destroyed by the researcher;
6. participants will be informed that the Seminar Series will be audio and video recorded
and the tapes will only be used for academic and training reasons. At Seminar 1, 2, 3
the cameras will be set at the back of the room, behind the participants so that their
face will not be recorded. For focus groups video will only be used if the sound of the
audio recorder is unclear to distinguish what it is said, as parents may speak
simultaneously or soft. After focus group transcription the video and audio tapes will
be destroyed by the researcher.
7. participants can refuse to participate in either the intervention or research and/or
can discontinue participation without penalty at any time by advising the researchers
of this decision. By withdrawing from the study, they also have the right to withdraw
all their data collected until that point.
8. in case of further questions participants can directly ask the researcher by phone or
email who will do his best to answer their query. If they remain unhappy and wish to
make a formal complaint, they can contact the Research Ethics Committee at the
University of Oxford (ethics@socsci.ox.ac.uk; +44 (0)1865 614871; Social Sciences &
Humanities Inter-Divisional Research Ethics Committee, Oxford University, Hayes House,
75 George Street, Oxford, OX1 2BQ, UK).
For parents who request additional professional help, a list with psychological health
services will be provided. Participants may participate only after having read the
information sheet and had signed it. All consenting and assenting participants will be
offered a copy of the informed consent form. Parents who do not respond to their invitation
for the Seminars will be asked to give phone-consent.
Regarding the consent form, the information sheet and the rest of the questionnaires which
were in English, first they were translated by the researcher into Greek. All translations
were reviewed by two Greek parents and a Greek Lecturer in Linguistics at University of
Cambridge for understanding and relevance of the translated terms. All translations were
adjusted according to the reviewers' comments. At the end, a Greek-American Health
Professional checked if the final Greek translations matched the original English ones. The
Conners and the SQD have officially been translated in Greek.
The parents who return the forms will move to the next part of the recruitment which is the
'Eligibility Criteria Phase'. Parents who do not respond will be recontacted by the
researcher and his assistant through emails and phone calls. They will be asked to give
phone-consent and return the baseline measures. Further eligibility and exclusion criteria
will be applied as specified in the following section.
Phase 2: Randomisation The assistant will code the participants so that the researcher who
will run all the statistical analyses cannot identify the participants. After the
participants are coded, the researcher will randomise the coded participants into two
allocation groups. A blocked randomisation process will stratify the participants according
to three child factors (sex, age and child behaviour difficulties). A computerised random
integer generator will be used to generate the random allocation sequence for the separate
randomisation lists. A sample size calculator formula for statistical superiority design
indicated that 130 participants would be required to achieve an effect size of 0.8 for the
primary outcome measure at the 5% significance level with a ratio of 2:1 intervention to
control. After we allowed for expected drop out of 40% based on similar studies (Sanders,
Prior, & Ralph, 2009) the target population was 182 parents. After initial randomisation,
the same process will be followed for every additional person who is interested in
participating in the study. The assistant will include these participants in the appropriate
group.
Phase 3: Intervention Parents in the experimental group will be invited to attend the brief
prevention Seminar Series on positive parenting which included three Seminars. As the
Seminar Series is not a well-evidence intervention, it has never been delivered in Greece
before, and there are no other studies that prove its effectiveness outside Australia, a
wait-list controlled design could not be justified. Parents in the control group will only
receive three leaflets on child health and development, Child Health Information Linked to
Development Sheets (CHILDS).
Phase 4: Post-assessment After the completion of the Seminar Series, in post-assessment
period the assistant will send to all parents the post-assessment booklets via mail.
Pre-paid envelopes will be provided for the participants' convenience. Those who do not
respond will be chased by the researcher and his assistant through emails and phone calls.
If the study will be run as a pre-post study with no control groups, post-assessment
measures can be distributed and returned during the last seminar.
Phase 5: Focus Groups Focus groups will be organised to investigate whether parents applied
the strategies they learned during the Seminars as well as how easy or difficult it was for
parents to apply them in their everyday life. Participants in the experimental group will be
divided into small groups of 10. Each focus group will last 1 hour and 30 minutes. A
questionnaire rating the acceptability, feasibility and cultural relevance of the strategies
presented in the Seminar Series will also be distributed to get a general view on the
programme characteristics. For parents who request additional professional help, a list with
psychological health services provided in the general area of Attica will be offered. The
Treatment Evaluation Inventory (Kazdin, 1981) and the Parent Satisfaction Form (Sanders et
al., 2008) will also be distributed.
Phase 6: 6-month Follow-up Three months after the completion of the intervention, a further
evaluation will be conducted to examine the long-term effects of the brief prevention
programme. The assistant will send to all parents the 6-month follow-up assessment booklets
via mail. Pre-paid envelopes will be provided for the participants' convenience. Those who
do not respond will be chased by the researcher and his assistant through emails and phone
calls.
Data Analysis: All families will be included in an intention-to-treat (ITT) analysis
irrespective of uptake of intervention using the group median score for those lost to
follow-up to eliminate the effects of a severe outlier presented in the data (High, 2005).
These results will be compared to those who adhered strictly to the protocol in a per
protocol (PP) analysis. To check for demographic differences, we will run baseline and
attrition analyses.
Differences between groups on all outcomes will be assessed by ANCOVAs for uni-dimensional
questionnaires, and MANCOVAs for multi-dimensional questionnaires. To control for baseline
differences in the primary outcome, results will present the treatment effect as the
estimated mean group difference in change scores from baseline to post-intervention
controlling for baseline demographic differences on parental education and number of
children in the family, at a conventional p value of .05, the effect sizes using Cohen's d,
and the estimated effect at 95% confidence intervals (Altman, 2005). Change scores will be
calculated by simple subtraction, such as that a positive change score represents greater
improvement in the desired therapeutic direction. The estimated marginal means will be
reported as means scores adjusted for the covariates used (Austin, Manca, Zwarrenstein,
Juurlink, & Stanbrook, 2010). Significant effects will be further explored using ANCOVAs,
and pairwise comparisons determined any significant differences between conditions.
Bonferroni adjustments will be made based on the number of pairwise comparisons conducted.
Phase 7: End of Research At the end of the study and after parents have returned the 6-month
follow-up assessment booklets the researcher will send them an envelope with the following
material. Parents in the experimental group will receive: (i) a thank you letter; (ii) the
CHILDS sent to parents at the control group and; (iii) a certificate of attendance. On the
other hand, parents in the control group will receive: (i) a thank you letter and; (ii) the
Seminar information material given to parents at the experimental group.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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