Mental Health Clinical Trial
— RIGHTOfficial title:
Relationships in Good Hands Trial: Clinical and Cost-effectiveness of Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy for Abused and Neglected Young Children With Maltreatment-associated Problems and Their Parents
The research question is: Can the research recommend better ways for social care and health services to work work together to help adoptive and foster families? Can a therapy called DDP improve the mental health of 5-12 year old fostered or adopted children? Is DDP worth the commitment families need to give to it - and the extra cost to the services that deliver it? More than half of adopted or fostered children in the UK have mental health problems including ADHD (i.e. hyperactivity, impulsive behaviour and poor concentration), antisocial behaviour and problems with relationships. Abused and neglected children are more likely than others to have problems in school, become homeless, get involved in crime and even die young (e.g. from suicide), yet there are no fully tested treatments for such complex mental health problems. This is a huge problem because early treatment could greatly improve children's life chances - and reduce strain on health and social care budgets. There is a Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP) a parent-child therapy that takes around 20 sessions and focusses on "Playfulness, Acceptance, Curiosity and Empathy". There is not yet available really good evidence for or against it: many UK therapists like DDP, but it is a big commitment for families: once a week for about six months children will need time off school, the parents will need time off work - and this can be hard to explain to school friends, colleagues and bosses. Research team doesn't just need to know if DDP improves children's mental health - they also need to know if the commitment needed is worth it for families and whether the costs to services outweigh the benefits. In PHASE 1 the research team will find out whether DDP can work smoothly in the three different settings where it is usually delivered: the NHS, Social Care and Private Practice. Many abused children need other medical and psychiatric support so, the research will assess whether children can get any additional assessments or referrals they may need . In PHASE 2, the research team plans to find out if it is practically possible to run a high quality trial of DDP. This phase will involve 60 families to find out if they are happy to take part (whether offered DDP or usual services). If all goes to plan, these 60 families will contribute to the final results, along with the 180 families involved in the next PHASE 3 when the research team will test whether DDP is better than usual services and, if it is, whether the improvements in child mental health outweigh the costs. What impact will the research have? This study will make recommendations about how services should work together to help abused and neglected children and their families. If the researcher team finds that DDP is worth the time and money, it could improve the mental health of abused and neglected children across the world.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 240 |
Est. completion date | July 31, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | July 31, 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 5 Years to 12 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: • Adoptive or permanent foster parents with children aged 5-12 years with symptoms of MAPP or co-occurring mental health conditions and non-psychotherapeutic treatments Exclusion Criteria: - Families, otherwise eligible, deemed by therapists as not ready for DDP (usually where therapists have concerns about the ability of carers/parents to create a safe/ nurturing enough environment within which DDP can operate) - Children currently having another psychotherapy |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | Vale Valleys and Cardiff Adoption Collaborative | Barry | |
United Kingdom | Bedford Borough Council | Bedford | |
United Kingdom | Birmingham Children's Trust | Birmingham | |
United Kingdom | Bradford District Care Foundation Trust | Bradford | |
United Kingdom | One Adoption South Yorkshire | Doncaster | |
United Kingdom | Blaenau Gwent County Borough Council | Ebbw Vale | |
United Kingdom | Lanarkshire | Lanark | Scotland |
United Kingdom | South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust | London | |
United Kingdom | Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust | Norwich | |
United Kingdom | Norfolk County Council | Norwich | |
United Kingdom | Nottingham City Council | Nottingham | |
United Kingdom | Nottinghamshire County Council (Adoption East Midlands) | Nottingham | |
United Kingdom | Oxfordshire | Oxford | |
United Kingdom | Central Bedfordshire Council | Shefford | |
United Kingdom | Hertfordshire County Council | Stevenage | |
United Kingdom | Adoption@Heart | Wolverhampton |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Glasgow | National Institute for Health Research, United Kingdom, University of Nottingham, University of Oxford |
United Kingdom,
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* Note: There are 19 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Reactive Attachment Disorder and Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder Assessment (RADA) | The Reactive Attachment Disorder and Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder Assessment (RADA) is the only measure of Attachment Disorder symptoms that is well validated against clinician diagnosis in middle childhood. Ii is a diagnostic measure that has algorithms compliant with DSM 5 for Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD) and Disinhibited Social Engagement Disorder (DSED), and it can also be used as a continuous measure (33-items; scoring range 0-66). Previous research suggests a standard deviation of 10.4 for the RADA. Applying the same assumption as for SDQ (correlation between baseline and follow-up of 0.4, correlation within clusters of 0.03, cluster size of 10, retention rate of 0.72), there will be 90% power to detect a difference in RADA of at least 7.25 with a sample size of 190. Typically developing children usually have very low or zero scores on measures for Attachment Disorders so would consider such a change in RADA to be clinically significant. | 12 months from baseline | |
Primary | Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) | Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) has good sensitivity to change in RCTs. Candidate measures are included for the four problem areas in our logic model: child emotion regulation, parental stress, parent-child relationship functioning and child mental health. The research team estimates that 190 families will be required to determine clinical- and cost effectiveness based on findings from an ongoing trial of maltreated pre-school children, information from clinics using the SDQ to evaluate DDP and SDQ population norms. This aims for 90% power, assumes a clinical difference in SDQ of 4 points, a baseline and 1-year follow-up correlation in SDQ of 0.4, a standard deviation in SDQ of 5.8, an intra-cluster correlation of 0.03 (between families who see the same therapist) and a retention rate of 72%. | 12 months from baseline |
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