Parent-Child Relations Clinical Trial
— ATTACH™Official title:
Attachment and Child Health (ATTACH™) Program: Promoting Vulnerable Children's Health at Scale
ATTACH™ is a psycho-educational parenting program, designed with community agencies serving families of preschoolers affected by toxic stress (e.g. parental depression, addictions, domestic violence, poverty) to bolster children's health and development. It focuses on improving parent-child relationship quality by targeting parents' reflective function (RF), i.e. the ability to better understand one's own and one's child's thoughts and feelings. RF is essential for high quality parent-child relationships and secure attachment, both tied to child development and health, especially cognition, communication and inflammation. ATTACH™ was implemented and tested in seven rapid-cycling pilot studies by researchers, guided by the IDEAS (Innovate, Develop, Evaluate, Adapt, Scale) Framework™, an innovative clinical trial approach. ATTACH™ significantly improved: (a) parent-child relationship quality and attachment, (b) parents' RF scores, and (c) children's cognitive and motor development. However, whether ATTACH™ continues to work with delivery by trained agency healthcare professionals rather than study researchers, in naturalistic, community settings remains to be seen. Small sample sizes also limited the ability to assess longer-term impacts and whether ATTACH™ is equally effective across patient populations. Further, another parenting intervention successfully reduced systemic inflammation in children exposed to toxic stress. Whether ATTACH™ impacts novel biomarkers of inflammation (i.e. immune cell gene expression and DNA methylation) is not known.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 300 |
Est. completion date | August 31, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | August 31, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - parents with children between birth and 32 months of age (based on selection of age-appropriate tools for assessing children's health and development) - parents agree to participate in the ATTACH™ program consisting of 10-12 weeks of one-hour per week parent training sessions - parents agreed to bring a co-parent for 2-3 of the 10 sessions (when possible) - parents agree to the dried blood sample collection from themselves and their children (in Calgary agencies) Exclusion Criteria: - |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | University of Calgary | Calgary | Alberta |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Calgary |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Parent-Child Relationship Quality will be measured by Parent Child Interaction Teaching Scale (PCITS). | The PCITS scale (Sumner & Spietz, 1994) is an observational binary measure of interactions in parent-child teaching situations to measure parent-child interaction quality in infants 36 months or younger. Considered as the gold standard, PCITS consists of 73 items categorized into 6 subscales including parental sensitivity to cues, responsiveness to distress, growth fostering, and cognitive growth fostering, and infant clarity of cues and responsiveness to parent. Certified coders code the items either as yes or no; Yes responses are then summed to yield a total score for each sub-scale. Final PCITS scores include total scores for each subscale, parent total, child total, and parent-child total scores, along with total parent contingency and child contingency scores. The observation of teaching interaction typically takes 5 minutes. Scale range from 0 - 73. A higher score means a better outcome, i.e. higher quality of parent-child interaction. | Change from baseline PCITS scores after completion of intervention and at 3 months. | |
Secondary | Parental Reflective Function will be measured by Parental Reflective Function Questionnaire (PRFQ). | The PRFQ (Luyten et al., 2017) is an 18-item self-reported questionnaire that assesses parental RF and takes 5 minutes to administer. It consists of 3 subscales to capture key features of parental RF including: (a) Pre-mentalizing subscale to assess non-mentalizing modes characteristic of parents with impairments in RF (b) Certainty in Mental States subscale to examine the capacity to recognize the opacity of mental states, and (c) Interest and Curiosity subscale that relates to parental interest and curiosity in mental states. Each subscale consists of 6 items and each item is rated on a 7-point Likert scale. For the PRFQ Pre-mentalizing subscale, higher scores indicate lower levels of parental RF . For the PRFQ Certainty in Mental States and Interest and Curiosity subscales, average levels of both PRFQ Certainty in Mental States and Interest and Curiosity subscales may be most adaptive, whereas either low or very high levels may be more maladaptive. | Change from baseline PRFQ scores after completion of intervention and at 3 months. | |
Secondary | Child Development, measured by Ages and Stages Questionnaire - 3rd Edition | Developed by Squires and Bricker (2009), ASQ - 3 is a series of parent-completed questionnaires to assess child development in 5 domains namely communication, gross motor, fine motor, problem solving, and personal-social skills. There are 21 versions for different age groups 21 ranging from 1 to 66 months, with 6 questions in each domain asking if the child can or cannot do age-appropriate tasks. Adding up items in each domain provides a total score for that domain (Mackrides, 2011). Summing up total scores for each domain yields the total score (out of 60). Higher scores are indicative of healthier outcomes (Bedford, 2014). | Change from baseline ASQ-3 scores after completion of intervention and at 3 months. |
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