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Promotion of Successful Parenting (PROMISE)

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University of Rochester

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pregnant and Parenting Women

Treatments

Behavioral: Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation
Behavioral: Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT03808987
1P50HD096698-01 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Home visitation by community health workers is a commonly utilized approach to support families and prevent child maltreatment. At times, however, more intensive intervention is needed to address familial trauma, depression, or other challenges. This preventive treatment evaluation study evaluates whether adding Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) to a Community Health Worker (CHW) outreach model improves positive parenting and parent-child relationships above CHW alone. The efficacy of CPP has been demonstrated with maltreated and other high-risk populations. This evaluation will examine optimal timing of CPP (beginning prenatally or postnatally) and optimal duration of services (6 vs. 12 months). Additionally, how and for whom CPP is most effective and why will be examined. Assessments of parenting, maternal sensitivity, representational models, cognitions, physiological reactivity, and physical health indicators will be assessed prenatally, and at children's age of 3, 9, and 12 months.

Full description

PROMISE is integrated into the TRANSFORM Capstone Center to promote the next generation of research on child maltreatment, translate research findings into clinical and preventive interventions, and disseminate research and best practice to varied stakeholders. Informed by developmental psychopathology, the research incorporates multiple levels of analysis within a lifespan framework. Increasing knowledge of optimal methods for delivering dual mother and child preventive intervention has crucial public health significance in preventing child maltreatment. PROMISE involves a randomized control trial to evaluate whether expanding a Community Health Worker (CHW) outreach model, by adding Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), an intensive intervention that focuses on parent-infant relationships for families at risk for child maltreatment, increases efficacy for improved mother-child relationships, more sensitive parenting, healthier child development, and maltreatment prevention. The efficacy of CPP has been demonstrated with maltreated and other high-risk populations. Through the use of four intervention arms, the evaluation will assess whether more intensive intervention better protects against child maltreatment compared with CHW support alone, and will determine the optimal timing of these interventions (i.e., beginning prenatally or postnatally), the optimal duration of services (i.e., 6 vs. 12 months), mechanisms of effect (mediator analyses), and which intervention strategy works best for mothers with varying risk factors (moderator analyses). Pregnant women (N = 300) and their infants after birth will participate. Longitudinal assessments will occur during the third trimester of pregnancy, at infant's ages of 3 and 9 months, and a post-intervention follow-up at 15 months old. The measurements obtained at each timepoint constitute a rich multi-level perspective of maternal and child functioning over time in response to the interventions. Maternal parenting behaviors, representational models, cognitions, and physiological reactivity, and infants' health and development will be assessed longitudinally. CPP groups are hypothesized to improve sensitive and responsive parenting and secure attachment, relative to CHW home visitation alone, thereby reducing risks for child maltreatment. Improvements in maternal attachment representations, parenting cognitions, and stress reactivity are hypothesized to mediate treatment outcomes. Moderators, including maternal histories of trauma, psychopathology, and intimate partner violence, will advance determination of differential responsiveness to CHW and CPP (what works for whom and why?) and allow for tailored preventive strategies. Identification of timing, dosage, and intensity of service delivery, along with outcome mediators and moderators is innovative and will facilitate development of targeted prevention and intervention strategies that support parenting and decrease child maltreatment for this vulnerable population.

Enrollment

222 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participants will be low-income pregnant adult women eligible for Medicaid and who have been referred to a Community Health Worker program based on their high psychosocial risk status.

Exclusion criteria

  • Mothers will be excluded if they have significant cognitive limitations, severe psychiatric disorders requiring a higher level of care (e.g., imminent suicidal ideation requiring hospitalization, psychotic features), non-English proficiency, age less than 18, or a physical disability that impedes ability to complete study procedures. Mothers whose psychiatric needs or substance use requires inpatient treatment will be excluded. Mothers will be excluded if they terminate their pregnancy or do not deliver a live birth.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

222 participants in 4 patient groups

CHW+CPP brief prenatal onset
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) for 6 months, beginning prenatally, in addition to services from a Community Health Worker (CHW)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)
Behavioral: Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation
CHW+CPP brief postnatal onset
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) for 6 months, beginning postnatally, in addition to services from a Community Health Worker (CHW)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)
Behavioral: Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation
CHW+CPP 12 months
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) for 12 months, beginning prenatally, in addition to services from a Community Health Worker (CHW)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)
Behavioral: Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation
CHW only
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive services from a Community Health Worker (CHW) without Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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