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New Parent Support Program Evaluation

The Pennsylvania State University (PENNSTATE) logo

The Pennsylvania State University (PENNSTATE)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Child Maltreatment

Treatments

Behavioral: Take Root Home Visitation (TRHV)
Behavioral: Services as Usual (SAU)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT05236192
STUDY00019356

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to perform a program evaluation of the Navy and Marine Corps' New Parent Support Program (NPSP) home-visiting option. Both the Navy and Marine Corps have decided to pilot the Take Root Home Visitation (TRHV) curriculum, which is an evidence-informed, standardized program, with clients receiving NPSP home visits. This study is designed to examine the implementation and program effectiveness of TRHV compared to services as usual (SAU). Program outcomes include child development, parenting behaviors, child maltreatment risk and protective factors, and child maltreatment incidents. Implementation outcomes include clinicians' and clients' satisfaction with the program, clinicians' fidelity to the program delivery model, and clients' engagement with the program.

Full description

The Navy and Marine Corps' NPSP home visiting option assists families who are at risk for child abuse and neglect by providing those families with home visitation by a trained professional (e.g., licensed clinical social worker, nurse). The ultimate goal of NPSP home visiting is to promote strong parenting practices and healthy families by providing parents with skills to foster child development and well-being. Families, expecting a child and with children up to age three, participating in the NPSP home visiting services at select military installations will be recruited for a cluster randomized controlled effectiveness-implementation hybrid Type 2 design program evaluation, which simultaneously tests the implementation and client related outcomes of a program (Curran et al., 2012).

Rigorous program evaluations of Navy and Marine Corps NPSP home visiting services are lacking. In fact, only one published study evaluating Navy NPSP could be located (Kelley et al., 2006). While the results of Kelley et al.'s (2006) study were generally positive, it was a single-group retrospective design that did not assess implementation outcomes or program outcomes related to child maltreatment. Thus, that study's ability to inform NPSP home visiting services is limited. Further, findings from past analyses of Army NPSP offered no evidence that NPSP services directly prevent child abuse and neglect (Kaye, Faber, Schiavone, & Perkins, 2016). Among the general U.S. population, research findings are mixed with regard to the effectiveness of home visiting programs for preventing child maltreatment (Howard & Brooks-Gunn, 2009; Kaminski, Valle, Filene, & Boyle, 2008). However, the available evidence does indicate that these programs can positively alter parenting practices.

Without a rigorous, experimental evaluation, it is difficult to assess whether the Navy's and Marine Corps' NPSP service as usual (SAU) is having the intended impacts on participating families. Further, the both Services are interested in exploring the utility of delivering the Take Root Home Visitation (TRHV) program. TRHV is a newly developed, evidence-informed, secondary, home-visiting prevention program developed by researchers at the Clearinghouse for Military Family Readiness at Penn State in collaboration with the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Military Community and Family Policy. TRHV has not been evaluated within the context of the Navy or Marine Corps. TRHV has been implemented with the Army as part of the Clearinghouse's three-phase evaluation of Army NPSP. Though the final report is still forthcoming, a preliminary report on program implementation showed that home visitors found TRHV to be acceptable and were able to implement the program with fidelity (Kaye et al., 2021). Moreover, parents receiving TRHV reported high levels of satisfaction with the program and stayed in NPSP services longer than parents receiving SAU (Kaye et al., 2021).

The extent to which the Army TRHV implementation findings generalize to the Navy and Marine Corps is unclear. Additionally, it is unclear to what extent TRHV will impact program outcomes, especially when compared to SAU. This study is designed to help bring clarity to these issues.

Enrollment

341 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria (NPSP Participants):

  • 18+ years old
  • Stationed at one of the participating military installations
  • Active duty, retired, National Guard or Reserves service member or spouse/partner
  • Pregnant or have a child 0-3-years-old
  • Eligible to receive NPSP home-visiting services
  • Speak and understand English proficiently

Inclusion Criteria (NPSP Home Visitors):

  • 18+ years old
  • Working at one of the participating military installations as a NPSP home visitor
  • Speak and understand English proficiently

Inclusion Criteria (NPSP Participants' Children):

  • Children of active duty, retired, National Guard or Reserves service member or spouse/partner receiving NPSP home-visiting services
  • 0-3-years-old

Exclusion Criteria (NPSP Participants):

  • Younger than 18 years of age
  • Not stationed at one of the participating military installations
  • Not an active duty, retired, National Guard or Reserves service member or spouse/partner
  • Not currently pregnant or the parent of a child 0-3-years-old
  • Not eligible for NPSP home-visiting services
  • Does not speak or understand English proficiently

Exclusion Criteria (NPSP Home Visitors):

  • Younger than 18 years of age
  • Not employed at one of the participating military installations as a NPSP home visitor
  • Does not speak or understand English proficiently

Exclusion Criteria (NPSP Participants' Children):

  • Not the child of an active duty, retired, National Guard or Reserves service member or spouse/partner receiving NPSP home-visiting services
  • Older than 3 years of age

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

341 participants in 2 patient groups

Take Root Home Visitation (TRHV)
Experimental group
Description:
TRHV is an evidence-informed, manualized home-visiting curriculum.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Take Root Home Visitation (TRHV)
Services as Usual (SAU)
Active Comparator group
Description:
SAU involves the current standard of care implemented at the participating Navy and Marine Corps installations.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Services as Usual (SAU)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ryan P Chesnut, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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