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Evaluation of the CHIME Intervention for Improving Early Head Start/Head Start Educator Well-being

University of Nebraska logo

University of Nebraska

Status

Completed

Conditions

Compassion
Social Skills
Work Related Stress
Health, Subjective

Treatments

Behavioral: Cultivating Healthy Intentional Mindful Educators

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will test how well a mindfulness-based intervention called CHIME improves the emotional well-being of educators in Early Head Start and Head Start (EHS/HS) settings. The study also will examine if there are any benefits to young children's social emotional health as a result of the CHIME program. Researchers will compare educators who participate in CHIME to educators who are asked to participate at a later time to see if there are benefits to their emotional health and teaching practices.

Full description

To address the critical need of supporting Early Head Start/Head Start (EHS/HS) education staff well-being, investigators are collaborating with EHS/HS programs to co-refine and adapt a new mindfulness-based intervention (MBI), Cultivating Healthy Intentional Mindful Educators (CHIME-HS), to make the intervention effective and internally sustainable for EHS/HS programs. Small studies with CHIME in general early care and education settings provide a proof of concept of its effectiveness, with educators reporting enhanced well-being and reduced workplace burnout. However, CHIME has not been adapted for or rigorously tested in EHS/HS settings. Building on promising evidence for the efficacy of CHIME, investigators partnered with EHS/HS programs to gather feedback from EHS and HS staff and families about how to refine CHIME to best address their needs, and determine CHIME's feasibility, acceptability, and fidelity within the EHS/HS context. In this way, investigators will maximize CHIME's acceptability, feasibility, and sustainability specifically for the unique needs of the HS/EHS start community. Investigators draw upon tenets of community-engaged research to co-refine and adapt the program to address EHS/HS education staff's well-being more effectively, and with sustainability in mind. After investigators refine CHIME in phase 1, investigators will work with EHS/HS partners to coordinate a rigorous, multi-method approach to evaluate the efficacy of CHIME with 120 EHS/HS education staff and 730 children/families (Phase 2). Investigators will also interview 10 directors and assistant EHS/HS directors to identify barriers and facilitators to implementation and to put in place effective mechanisms to support the sustainability of CHIME-HS (Phase 3). Through the iterative development and refinement of the facilitator training, investigators will determine if trained EHS/HS staff can effectively implement CHIME with fidelity for promoting EHS/HS education staff emotional well-being and workplace engagement, decreasing their physiological and emotional reactivity, promoting positive teaching practices, strengthening family partnerships, and promoting young children's social skills and self-regulation. Additionally, investigators will engage with other Early Head Start/Head Start University Partnership (HSUP) grantees during the yearly grantee workshop to share lessons learned, identify opportunities for collaborative analyses, and create shared dissemination products. A variety of dissemination efforts will be utilized to make findings from the study accessible to multiple audiences invested in EHS and HS populations. Dissemination products will include the CHIME-HS intervention, its promise for improving education staff well-being, outcomes, and lessons learned about implementation, including usability, feasibility, and cost. Investigators will work cooperatively with the consortium to disseminate policy findings recognizing that collective presentation and publication of findings can concentrate the impact.

Enrollment

571 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

There are 3 types of participants included in this study: Early Head Start/Head Start education staff who work at one of the partner sites; parents of children attending EHS or HS; children attending EHS or HS and enrolled in the classroom of a participating EHS/HS educator.

Inclusion criteria for each of these groups are as follows:

Early Head Start and Head Start Educators:

  • Provision of signed and dated informed consent form in Docusign
  • Currently employed as a lead or assistant educator for >20 hours per week in a participating Head Start or Early Head Start center
  • Stated intention to participate in the CHIME intervention
  • All genders; age 19 and older
  • Able to complete activities in English

Parents

  • Provision of electronically (in Docusign) /manually signed informed consent form
  • All genders
  • Age 19 and older
  • is Parent or legal guardian of child enrolled in the classroom of a EHS/HS educator participating in the study
  • Able to complete activities

Children

  • Provision of electronically signed informed consent form by parent/legal guardian
  • All genders; aged < 6 years
  • Enrolled in the classroom of a EHS/HS educator participating in the study
  • If > 3 years, ability to complete study activities in English or with translation support

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria for each of the study groups are as follows:

Early Head Start and Head Start Educators:

  • Does not currently work at a participating HS/EHS center
  • younger than 19 years of age

Parents

  • Not a parent/legal guardian of a child in an EHS/HS classroom
  • younger than 19 years of age Children NA, although children less than 3 years will not complete the self-regulation tasks These exclusion criteria are essential to the design of the study. The population of interest is EHS/HS education staff (e.g., teachers) working within centers that have agreed to participate in the evaluation of CHIME. The legal age of majority in Nebraska is age 19 years.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

571 participants in 2 patient groups

Receives CHIME
Experimental group
Description:
Half of the educators participating in the trial will be assigned to this condition. CHIME is an 8-week, mindfulness and self-compassion based intervention that teaches educators strategies to enhance socioemotional learning in the classroom. The primary endpoints are: educator mindfulness and self-compassion, educator emotional regulation, educator heart rate variability, educator wellbeing and socio-emotional learning, and educator responsiveness, support, and sensitivity in the classroom. The secondary endpoints are: child self-regulation and social skills and family-school relationships.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Cultivating Healthy Intentional Mindful Educators
Wait-listed comparison
No Intervention group
Description:
Half of the HS/EHS educators will be assigned to a waitlisted control group. Specifically, these educators will be scheduled to receive the intervention after a 6-month waiting period. During the interim period, they will complete the same assessments as Arm 1, but will continue to receive 'business as usual' support and professional development through typical Head Start/EHS programming.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Holly Hatton, PhD; Jaci Foged, MA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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