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Children and adolescents with neurodevelopmental conditions are 3 to 5 times more likely than their peers to have other mental disorders such as anxiety, depression and disruptive behaviour. Furthermore, these conditions are less likely to be recognized, diagnosed and treated than for typically developing children. Parent training is a well-established approach to help parents change their behaviour and communication with their children with the goal of improving child behaviours. Parent-focused programs that are designed for typically developing children have shown mixed results for children with neurodevelopmental conditions and parents have reported significant challenges in accessing traditional health services due to barriers to care. There is an urgent need to explore how effective distance-delivered parenting programs can be implemented in real-world settings and how they should be adapted to meet the needs of families with children with neurodevelopmental conditions. The goal of this research project is to develop and test the effectiveness of two versions (group coaching & self-managed) of an online parenting program for managing challenging behaviours in children with neurodevelopmental disabilities. The Strongest Families Neurodevelopmental program is based on the well-established Strongest Families Parenting program for typically developing children with challenging behaviours, adapted with substantial involvement from a pan-Canadian Parent Advisory Committee. The program consists of 11 skill-based sessions with demonstration videos, audio clips, exercises, a resource webpage and a Parent-to-Parent online group (a closed Facebook group).
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SCREENING: Parents/caregivers must meet all of the following criteria to be eligible to proceed to Consent:
Any of the following criteria will exclude individuals from proceeding to Consent:
BASELINE ASSESSMENT:
Compared with children of the same age, does your child have difficulty learning things? Would you say your child has: no difficulty, some difficulty, a lot of difficulty or cannot do at all? No difficulty........................ 1 Some difficulty....................2 A lot of difficulty..................3 Cannot do at .....................4
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454 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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