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About
The Alabama Healthy Marriage and Relationship Education Initiative (AHMREI), a large-scale partnership among Auburn University and 9 additional implementation partners at Family Resource Centers, implements multiple program activities that respond to family needs and integrate comprehensive services to promote healthy marriages and relationships, as authorized by the Claims Resolution Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-291). The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of two selected couples education curricula- Elevate and Couples Connecting Mindfully. The programs are intended to improve the well-being of individuals, couples, and families in domains such as couple well-being, parenting skills, individual skills, and economic stability.
Full description
In 2015, Congress provided funding for grants to provide healthy marriage and relationship services to help interested couples enhance or improve adult and family relationships. The Administration for Children and Families (ACF), within the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), oversees these grants and provides supports to assist grantees in meeting their goals and objectives. To learn about the implementation and effects of these programs, Dr. Francesca Adler-Baeder at Auburn University was awarded a contract to conduct a local impact evaluation study. The evaluation includes impact and process studies for couples education curricula.
Couples who are eligible for the programs and agree to be in the study are randomly assigned to either one of two program groups (Elevate or Couples Connecting Mindfully) or a no-program control group. Program group members are offered program services; control group members are not offered those services. The impact study will examine whether the programs improve outcomes for individuals in couples and the children of the participants in the program group compared to outcomes of those in the control group. Members of both program and control groups are surveyed five times over 2 years: before they are randomly assigned, immediately after the curricula have been implemented (approximately 8 weeks later), and 6 months, 1 year, and 2 years after baseline. All surveys are administered via an online survey system, Qualtrics. The survey covers a range of questions related to couple relationships and interactions, individual functioning, parent-child interactions, co-parenting quality, and economic stability. The process aspect of the study will examine multiple aspects of the implementation and operation of the programs. Specifically, program attendance or dose, participant characteristics, facilitator-participant relationship, attitudes towards the program, and mechanisms of change will be considered in the process evaluation. Information for the process evaluation is obtained through the respondents' online surveys and facilitator/educator surveys.
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1,858 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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