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The Effect of Nonviolent Resistance in Parent Group Training in Child Psychiatric Care

U

Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Parenting
Mentalising
Helplessness, Learned
Family Conflict

Treatments

Behavioral: Nonviolent Resistance

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05086328
2021 GV OUG

Details and patient eligibility

About

In a Flemish sample of parents of children with psychiatric problems, this study evaluates the effect of a parent group training based on nonviolent resistance on family functioning, parenting variables and mental states of the parents, pre- and post-training.

Full description

Nonviolent Resistance (NVR) is an intervention method for families and teams that are suffering from helplessness and hopelessness. By empowering individuals through specific focus points and techniques, they can re-establish their role as authority figures for the child. The child, exhibiting dangerous and/or coercive behavior, can feel reconnected and guided.

Previous research has shown that parents score higher on General family functioning, Affective reactions and affective involvement, and Role definitions, but not Behavioral control, Problem solving and Communication. Positive effects were visible at a follow up moment, three months later. Parents reported significantly lower on anxiety for the aggression of their child, the self-efficiency about parental capacities and received social support. General parenting stress diminished significantly. A control group showed no such significant changes.

Participants with specific problems and waiting to be admitted in the residential ward at the study location can receive pre-care, in the form of a parental group training based on NVR. In six two weekly sessions, combined with intermediate telephone support and home assignments, parents are involved in important parent-child-oriented aspects.

This study will evaluate the effect of the training in a Flemish sample, focusing on family functioning, parenting variables and reflective functioning of the parents, pre- and post-training. T1 is at the time between invitation to participate and the first session; T2 is in the first week after the last session (T1 + 12 to 14 weeks); T3 is at three months after the last session; T4 is at six months after the last session.

The following primary outcomes are expected after the parent group:

  • More behavior and mental states pointing towards NVR
  • More use of adequate emotion regulation
  • Less behavioral problems in the child

Secondary outcomes are expected, according to previous research measuring indirect effects of NVR treatment

  • More adequate attunement to child
  • More cohesion and structure in the family
  • More adequate parenting behavior
  • Less stress and burdening for parents

The investigators also expect parents with a more secure attachment style to benefit more (T2) and longer (T3 and T4) from the training.

Enrollment

64 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Parents engage in the NVR training of the child psychiatric clinic at the study location for at least 5 out of 6 training sessions

Exclusion criteria

  • insufficient understanding of Dutch/Flemish language
  • simultaneously following a different parent group treatment, external to the study location

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Edward Campforts, MD; Bart Colson, MA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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