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Examining the Effects of Parenting Interventions on Children With Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) and Their Parents

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) logo

The University of Hong Kong (HKU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Parenting Intervention
Emotion Regulation
ADHD

Treatments

Behavioral: Mindful Parenting, Tuning in to Kids

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04999514
EA200195

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study investigates the effects of parenting interventions on improving the emotion regulation and functioning of the children with AD/HD as well as their parents' parenting practices and psychological well-being. Two kinds of parenting interventions are selected in this study, namely the Mindful Parenting and Tuning in to Kids programs. The value of this project lies in empowering parents through parenting techniques which they can use both for themselves and for their daily interactions with children. It is hoped to alleviate their stress from the role of parenting children with special needs, which may in turn lead to their better psychological well-being and greater harmony in the families.

Full description

Attention-Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder (AD/HD) is one of the most common neurodevelopmental disorders affecting children and adolescents. Core symptoms of inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity are associated with impairments in multiple aspects of functioning. Apart from the cognitive and behavioral symptoms listed in the diagnostic manual, emotional symptoms are often observed by the parents and teachers and commonly reported in behavioral rating scales. The prevalence of emotion-related problems among children and adolescents diagnosed with AD/HD is estimated to be between 24-50%. Emotion regulation problems in children and youths with AD/HD were associated with greater risk for more psychopathology, poorer psychosocial functioning, and increased rate of treatment service utilization. Follow-up study of children with AD/HD into adulthood found a higher prevalence of difficulties in emotion regulation among those with persistent AD/HD symptoms than those without.

Parenting a child with special needs such as AD/HD is known to be associated with increased level of parental stress. Apart from their jobs and other family duties, the parents must meet the challenges of taking care of their children's special needs and dealing with their functional problems. According to a survey conducted by the Centre for Special Educational Needs and Inclusive Education of the Educational University of Hong Kong in 2018, 82% of the parents of children with AD/HD experienced higher level of stress in relation to their children's symptoms, and over half of them reported to have mood problems. The parents often reported great frustrations in bringing up their children with limited support and encountering difficulties in daily interactions with their children. Previous research has demonstrated that parental mental health problems can adversely affect their parenting abilities and their children's adjustment.

Medication and behavioral treatment are the two evidence-based treatments for children with AD/HD. Apart from them, there are programs offered by public hospitals, government departments, and non-governmental organizations on teaching the parents skills to manage behavioral problems of children with AD/HD. However, parents may experience difficulties in applying these behavioral management skills when they are suffering from significant distress. In the recent years, new approaches such as mindfulness and emotion coaching have been applied to parenting intervention programs. Intervention studies have supported that these new parenting approaches have not only brought benefits to the parenting behaviors and parents' mental health but also to the children's behavioral problems and children's psychological well-being. Specific to the emotion regulation of children with AD/HD, the effect of behavioral management parent training has been examined in the previous research. However, there has been very limited intervention study which directly investigates the effect of new parenting intervention approaches on improving the emotion regulation of children.

In the present study, we propose to apply two parenting interventions for improving emotion regulation of children with AD/HD as well as their parents' parenting practices and psychological well-being. The two selected interventions are "Mindful Parenting" program and "Tuning into Kids" program. Using mindfulness techniques and everyday practice, the former intervention aims at helping parents cultivate awareness and self-regulation in parent-child interactions, bring compassion and non-judgmental acceptance to their difficulties. The latter intervention teaches the parents emotion coaching techniques to become more aware and reduce automatic response patterns to their children's emotions, and to communicate understanding of such emotions to children. Research has showed that these two new approaches are related to lower level of parental stress and reactivity, and fewer negative parent-child interactions.

Study Objectives:

  1. To evaluate the effects of the two parenting interventions on improving emotion regulation of children with AD/HD as well as their functioning.
  2. To evaluate the effects of the two parenting interventions in promoting parents' parenting practices and psychological well-being, which includes their emotion regulation, parenting stress, and mental health conditions.

Hypotheses:

  1. It is hypothesized that improvements in emotion regulation and functioning will be observed among children whose parents have completed one of the parenting interventions. Some of the improvements will be sustained in the two-months post-intervention assessment.
  2. It is expected that the parents who have completed the one of the parenting interventions will show improvements in their parenting practices and psychological well-being. The improvements will be showed immediately after the intervention, and some of the gains will also be sustained in the two-months post-intervention assessment.

Enrollment

57 patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The parent who has a child with the diagnosis of AD/HD made by qualified professionals. The child does not have co-morbid developmental disabilities such as Autism Spectrum Disorder and Intellectual Disability.
  • The child is attending P.1 to P.4 in local primary schools, age between 6 and 10.

Exclusion criteria

  • Parent who has previously received training in Mindful Parenting, Tuning in to Kids, or other 8-weeks mindfulness program.
  • Parent who has serious mental health condition that rendering him/her incapable of participating in the intervention program.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

57 participants in 3 patient groups

Mindful Parenting Program
Experimental group
Description:
The Mindful Parenting program as developed by Bögels and Restifo (2013), is selected as one of the parenting intervention programs in this study. It is an 8-week program that trains parents in mindfulness and support them to apply mindfulness in parenting context.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindful Parenting, Tuning in to Kids
Tuning in to Kids Program
Experimental group
Description:
The Tuning in to Kids program as developed by Havighurst and colleagues (2010), is selected as one of the parenting intervention programs in this study. It will be extended to 8-week program that aims at equipping parents with emotion coaching skills.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindful Parenting, Tuning in to Kids
Waitlist Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
The waitlist control group will not receive any intervention until the intervention arms complete their training. Depending on the availability of the program instructor, either the Mindful Parenting or Tuning in to Kids program will be offered to this group.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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