View clinical trials related to Maltreatment, Child.
Filter by:The goal of this observational study is to evaluate the effects of Pathways to Potential (P2P) on youth violence involvement in Michigan public K-12 students. The main goals of this study are: - This project will link longitudinal P2P participation data to state administrative records and school disciplinary data to evaluate associations between school P2P participation and youth outcomes-specifically chronic absenteeism, peer aggression expulsions, and child maltreatment rates within a school (Aim 1). - Given the focus of P2P is to improve the social and structural conditions within a school that contribute to student chronic absenteeism, the team will assess if chronic absenteeism rates mediate the relationships between school P2P participation and youth violence involvement (Aim 2). - Finally, a survey of success coaches will inform the examination of school and implementation factors that moderate associations between P2P participation and youth violence involvement (Aim 3). Schools participating in P2P receive Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) caseworkers, called success coaches, in local elementary, middle, and high schools. After identifying a social or material need that is a barrier to school attendance (e.g., transportation barriers, caregiver unemployment), success coaches connect students and families to community resources and public assistance.
Sub-Saharan Africa, with more than 56 million orphans worldwide, is the most affected region in terms of orphans to be cared for (UNICEF, 2014). The recently developed preventative approach Interaction Competencies with Children - for Caregivers (ICC-C; Hecker, Mkinga, Ssenyonga, & Hermenau, 2017) trains the essential interaction skills in working with children. The focus here is on strengthening a warm, sensitive and reliable relationship between caregiver and child as well as on non-violent education strategies. In a first pilot study the feasibility of the approach icould be demonstrated (Hermenau, Kaltenbach, Mkinga, & Hecker, 2015). The study applies a two-arm cluster-randomized controlled design. The participating institutions will be randomly divided into intervention and control bodies. The follow-up examination should take place three months after the intervention. All caregivers in facility (N = approx. 150) and 25 randomly selected children (age: 6-12) per facility (N = 200) will be included in this study.
The aim of this study is to experimentally assess whether an early parenting intervention for maltreating parents results in differential epigenetic marking of children's genome, particularly of DNA associated with immune system functioning, obesity, and mental health.