Clinical Trials Logo

Parenting clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Parenting.

Filter by:

NCT ID: NCT03697421 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Montefiore Medical Center Healthy Marriage and Relationship Education Program

Start date: July 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The proposed program will flexibly provide an array of relationship promotion activities incorporating case management and job placement/career advancement activities: marriage and relationship education; pre-marital education and marriage skills; marriage enhancement and marriage skills for married couples; and divorce reduction and relationship skills. In addition, our proposed local evaluation will examine factors that might account for the observed impacts of attending relationship education programs (i.e., higher levels of relationship satisfaction), including dosage of workshops, relationship commitment and longevity, and skill learning.

NCT ID: NCT03612505 Completed - Child Development Clinical Trials

Caregiver Interventions for Developmental Delays in Young Kenyan Children

Start date: July 13, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In this study, the investigators will only administer the intervention to children known to have neurodevelopmental delays. By focusing on adapting the intervention to be only a clinic-based treatment, a small number of community members could be trained to administer the program and increase the potential for sustainability. If the clinic-based group sessions prove to be effective for young children with neurodevelopmental delays, this would help inform the key areas of fidelity needed to maintain effectiveness of the intervention. This study is a critical first step to evaluating the Care for Child Development Intervention (CCDI) program's potential as a cross-cultural intervention that is sustainable and effective for the children at highest risk for neurodevelopmental delay. These results will have significant impacts in improving early childhood neurodevelopment both in Kenya and worldwide.

NCT ID: NCT03559907 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Partnering for Prevention: Building Healthy Habits in Underserved Communities

P4P
Start date: September 5, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This pilot study will estimate the unique and additive benefits of two parent-training programs (Cooking Matters for Parents and Promoting Routines of Exploration and Play during Mealtime) offered in undeserved communities.

NCT ID: NCT03539341 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Parenting for Lifelong Health - Thailand

Start date: December 11, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Pilot design: The feasibility pilot of PLH for Young Children in Thailand has a single-site, pre-post design with no control group, with the aims of assessing programme implementation, cultural and contextual relevance, and study feasibility. Although there is no comparison group and it is not designed to test effects, the pilot also has a provisional goal of reductions in child physical and emotional abuse at one-month post-intervention. RCT design: The RCT of PLH for Young Children Thailand is a randomized, controlled, observer-blinded, single-site trial with two parallel groups and a primary endpoint goal of reductions in child physical and emotional abuse at one month and three-months post-intervention. Randomisation will be performed at the individual level with a 1:1 allocation ratio. Allocation: Using a 1:1 allocation ratio, the 120 participants will be randomly assigned to either the intervention or control group using the concealed computerized programme Sealed Envelope. An external researcher based at the Department of Social Policy and Intervention at the University of Oxford, and who is not directly involved in the study, will generate the random sequence. The Project Coordinator and Co-Investigator McCoy will notify participants of their allocation status via telephone following the collection of baseline data, in order to ensure that participants remain blind to their status during the initial assessment. Blinding: Due to the involvement of facilitators and coaches in the delivery of the programme, blinding will not be possible for deliverers; moreover, participants cannot be blinded to their allocation status following the initial assessment. However, the allocation status of other participants will be kept concealed from participants in order to reduce the risk of contamination. Data collectors gathering outcome and process evaluation data, as well as statisticians providing support in data analysis, will be blinded to participant allocation status for the purposes of minimizing assessment bias. Cases of compromised blinding will be immediately reported to the Research Manager, who will consult with the research team on an appropriate course of action. Un-blinding of participants will only be permitted if any instances of significant harm due to participation in the study are reported by a participant or any member of the project team at any stage of the study. This study is funded by the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Thailand and the Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford. UNICEF grant reference: PCA/THLC/2017/002

NCT ID: NCT03522610 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of a Web-enhanced Parenting Program for Military Families

ADAPT
Start date: July 15, 2010
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed project will produce and test the first combined group-online prevention program for reintegrating parents - "ADAPT: After Deployment Adaptive Parenting Tools". We will conduct a randomized effectiveness trial of the program, compared with a 'services as usual' (tip sheet) comparison group among 400 military families identified in the RFA as a special population: reintegrating Army National Guard parents.

NCT ID: NCT03502252 Completed - Child Development Clinical Trials

Experimental Evaluation of Semillas de Apego

Start date: March 5, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current trial focuses on the effectiveness evaluation of Semillas de Apego in Tumaco, a municipality in Colombia heavily affected by violence and poverty. Over a time-span of 23 months, the researchers will follow the implementation of Semillas de Apego with 40 groups of 16 participants each, all of them mothers or primary caregivers of children 2 to 5. This will allow the researchers to reach a total of 640 participants and their children. The impact evaluation will be based on a cluster- randomized control trial in which the researchers will assign 1280 eligible subjects, nested within 18 child development centers, to either an intervention arm or a control group. The former group will participate in 15 group-led session over the period of 3 months; the latter will continue to have access to the regular early childhood programs offered through the centers to which children are affiliated. Data will be collected at baseline and two follow-ups: 1 and 12 months after the implementation has concluded. The researchers hypothesize that the program will have a positive and sequential impact on the following dimensions: (i) primary caregiver's mental health, (ii) child rearing practices, (iii) quality of child-parent emotional bond, (iv) children's mental health, and (v) children's cognitive and socioemotional development.

NCT ID: NCT03498469 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

Reintegration of Children Into Family-based Care in Uganda

Start date: December 7, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed study will be an individually randomized controlled trial with children (age 1 to 13 years at the time of screening for inclusion in the study) living in residential care, reintegrated back into family-based care, in Uganda. It is designed to evaluate the impact of adding a household-based parenting program to a standardized reintegration package that includes individualized case management support and a reunification cash grant, aimed at improving the reintegration of children living in residential care back into family-based care. The study population will include children living in residential care facilities (RCFs) in Mpigi, Mukono, Masaka and Greater Masaka districts in Uganda. Study participants will be randomized to one of two arms of the study: the comparison arm and the intervention arm. The target sample size is 640 children with 320 in each arm of the study. Children assigned to the comparison arm will receive a standard reintegration package that includes individualized case management support and a reunification cash grant. Those in the intervention arm will receive the enhanced reintegration package that includes individualized case management support, reunification cash grant and a parenting intervention. Data will be collected at baseline (while the child is still living in the RCF), 6 months post-placement and 12 months post-placement. Data will be collected in the local language by a project trained local data collection partner on the following six domains of reintegration: Child health and development, Psychosocial health and wellbeing of the child and primary caregiver, Protection and safety of the child, Caregiver-child relationship, Child's and caregiver's sense of social and community belonging, Education access, quality, and achievement (where age-appropriate). The sources of data are a) interviews with primary caregiver, b) interviews with RCF caregiver, c) interviews with older children (8-13 years of age), d) standardized assessments of child cognitive functioning for all the study children, and e) focus groups and interviews with participants, parenting facilitators, and case managers.

NCT ID: NCT03496155 Completed - Parenting Clinical Trials

A Pilot Efficacy and Implementation Study of the Strengths Intervention Project

SIP
Start date: May 4, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to test a strengths-based intervention to be delivered in a primary care setting with adolescents and a parent. Investigators want to find out if the intervention can help parents and teens communicate. Specifically Investigators want to see if they can help parents and teens identify and build teen's strengths. Half the dyads will receive the educational materials in conjunction with their teen's well-child visit, while the other half will receive usual care at the well-child visit and receive the educational materials at the end of the study. Additionally, Investigators expect that a strengths-based intervention may also impact adherence to treatment in youth with a chronic illness. As such, Investigators will include a subgroup of teenagers diagnosed with asthma in this study, to assess whether the strengths-based intervention that the Investigators developed has an impact on adherence.

NCT ID: NCT03487627 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Integrated Intervention for Caregivers--Pilot RCT

Start date: May 4, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adolescents who have been hospitalized for suicidal behavior are at risk for engaging in additional suicidal behavior. After hospitalization, parents or guardians are typically asked to be responsible for helping to prevent further suicidal behavior. This can include monitoring the youth, making sure the home is safe, getting the youth any needed treatment, and balancing the parents' expectations of the youth with the understanding that the youth is in a vulnerable state. Even with this effort by parents, adolescents often have additional crisis situations. The goal of this study is to develop and test an integrated electronic and care support service intervention for these caregivers of suicidal youth. It is expected that this intervention will help parents/guardians in the roles of caring for suicidal youth after discharge from the hospital. This pilot randomized controlled trial will compare the intervention to enhanced treatment as usual.

NCT ID: NCT03487575 Completed - Suicide Clinical Trials

Integrated Intervention for Caregivers--Open Trial

Start date: August 12, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Adolescents who have been hospitalized for suicidal behavior are at risk for engaging in additional suicidal behavior. After hospitalization, parents or guardians are typically asked to be responsible for helping to prevent further suicidal behavior. This can include monitoring the youth, making sure the home is safe, getting the youth any needed treatment, and balancing the parents' expectations of the youth with the understanding that the youth is in a vulnerable state. Even with these efforts by parents, adolescents often have additional crisis situations. The goal of this study is to develop and test an integrated electronic and care support service intervention for parents of suicidal youth. It is expected that this intervention will help parents/guardians in the roles of caring for suicidal youth after discharge from the hospital. This open trial will assess the feasibility of this intervention for a separate pilot randomized controlled trial to compare the intervention to enhanced treatment as usual.