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Effectiveness of a Baby App for Enhancing Infant Mental Well-being (RCT)

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) logo

The University of Hong Kong (HKU)

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Child Development

Treatments

Device: Smartphone app "Happy Baby HK"
Device: Family Health Service parenting booklet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06163560
Babyapp_rct

Details and patient eligibility

About

This RCT aims to design and develop a developmental guidance program delivered by a smartphone app "Happy Baby HK" and evaluate its effectiveness for enhancing the mental well-being of recently born infants in Hong Kong. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of the improvement in the effect of infants and decrease of risk of developmental delay in very young children.

The smartphone app "Happy Baby HK" will be designed and developed by different professionals. Then, participants will be invited to use this app or the MCHC parenting booklet. They will also be invited to fill in some questionnaires at 6, 12 and 18 months postpartum to screen the developmental stages. Researchers will compare the intervention group and the control group to evaluate the effectiveness of this app for enhancing the mental well-being of infants.

Full description

Infant mental health refers to "the developing capacity of the child from birth to age three to experience, regulate, and express emotions; form close and secure interpersonal relationships; and explore the environment and learn - all in the context of family, community, and cultural expectations for young children". Despite the stability of temperamental characteristics across context and over time, environmental factors such as good mother-infant relationship can protect against the development of psychiatric morbidities in children with difficult temperament. Research studies also show that anticipatory guidance interventions can promote optimal child development, increase maternal knowledge of their infants, positive parent-infant interactions and reduce injury rates.

To enhance infant mental well-being, the proposed project team designs a smartphone app "Happy Baby HK" that provides development guidance to mothers of recently born infants in Hong Kong. Compared to traditional approaches (e.g. parenting pamphlets or clinical consultation on developmental issues), smartphone apps devoted to parenting guidance could feature video demonstrations, quizzes, interactive games, and written information with vivid images and cartoons which are more likely to engage parents and reinforce their learning anytime and anywhere.

However, currently there is no technology-based intervention with provision of anticipatory guidance information on child development in Hong Kong.

Therefore, the objective of this study is to design and develop a developmental guidance program delivered by a smartphone app "Hapy Baby HK" and evaluate its effectiveness for enhancing the mental well-being of recently born infants in Hong Kong. The improvement on parental stress will also be evaluated.

Enrollment

586 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 day to 18 months old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • mothers aged 18 years or above who attend the antenatal clinics or stay in the postnatal wards at Kwong Wah Hospital or Queen Mary Hospital at the time of recruitment and can give consent

Exclusion criteria

  • mothers who have inability to read Chinese, no Internet access, high risk pregnancy, history of psychiatric illness,
  • infants with congenital/genetic/structural abnormalities,
  • infants required admission to neonatal intensive care unit

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

586 participants in 2 patient groups

Babyapp group
Experimental group
Description:
This group will be provided access to the app and be asked for their feedback on the performance of the app.
Treatment:
Device: Smartphone app "Happy Baby HK"
Control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
This group will be given an information pack consisting of a parenting booklet from the Maternal and Child Health Centres (MCHC).
Treatment:
Device: Family Health Service parenting booklet

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Oscar Leung, MSocSc; Tracy LI, MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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