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The Effectiveness of a Mindful Parenting Intervention for Parents of Children With Psoriasis and Parents of Children With Eczema

U

University of Sheffield

Status

Completed

Conditions

Psoriasis
Eczema
Stress

Treatments

Behavioral: Mindful Parenting

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study investigates the impact of a mindful parenting intervention on parents of children with psoriasis or eczema. More specifically, this study will investigate the impact of the group on both the child and the parents mental health and quality of life.

Full description

Psoriasis and eczema are chronic inflammatory skin conditions that affect up to 2% and 20% of children respectively (Mahe, 2016; Plötz, Wiesender, Todorva & Ring, 2014). These skin conditions are associated with poorer mental health in the children themselves and in their parents (Megna et al., 2015; Hammer-Helmich et al., 2016). Little research has investigated ways of reducing parental stress in parents of children with chronic health conditions, such as psoriasis and eczema.

"Mindful Parenting" interventions offer one potential way of improving mental health and quality of life in parents and their children. Mindful parenting refers to a parenting style which involves paying close, non-judgemental attention to the child (Duncan et al., 2009). However, no research has investigated the impact of mindful parenting interventions on children with skin conditions and their parents.

The main aim of the current study is to investigate whether a mindful parenting intervention can improve mental health and quality of life in children with psoriasis/eczema and their parents. A single-group case-series design will be adopted, whereby participants will act as their own control; data collected from participants during and after they have received the intervention will be compared to data collected before they have received the intervention. Interviews will also be conducted after the intervention, to explore participants experience of the group.

The investigators predict that the intervention will improve mental health and quality of life in children with psoriasis/eczema and their parents. More specifically, we predict:

  • There will be a reduction in negative parental idiosyncratic measures of stress throughout the intervention phase, in comparison to baseline phase, that will be maintained in the follow-up phase.
  • There will be an improvement in positive parental idiosyncratic measures of stress during the intervention phase in comparison to baseline phase that will be maintained in the follow-up phase.
  • There will be a significant increase in levels of mindful parenting following the intervention phase, in comparison to baseline phase, that will be maintained in the follow-up phase.
  • There will be a significant decrease in levels of parental stress at end of intervention phase compared to baseline phase that will be maintained in the follow-up phase.
  • There will be a significant increase in parental quality of life and paediatric quality of life at the end of intervention phase compared to baseline phase that will be maintained in the follow-up phase .
  • There will be a significant improvement in psoriasis severity and itch at the follow-up phase compared to the baseline phase.

Enrollment

14 patients

Sex

All

Ages

4 to 16 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Child inclusion criteria:

  • Received a diagnosis of psoriasis or eczema from a medical professional
  • Aged 4-16 years
  • Fluent English speaker
  • Psoriasis or eczema is the primary health concern

Parent inclusion criteria:

  • Parent of child (aged four to 16 years old) with psoriasis or eczema
  • Aged 16 or over
  • Self-identifies as experiencing stress due to the child's skin condition
  • Fluent English Speaker
  • Able and willing to attend 9 group sessions
  • Willing to commit sufficient time to carrying out the practice (e.g. at home)
  • Willing to respond to daily brief text messages

Child exclusion criteria:

  • N/A

Parent exclusion criteria:

  • Active thoughts of suicide
  • Active thoughts of self-harm
  • Engaging in, or about to start, psychological therapy during the study period
  • Previously attended a mindful parenting group
  • Recent severe life events such as deliberate self-harm, hospital admission, or psychotic episode (last 12 months)
  • Experiencing physical pain or problems that may be worsened by yoga exercises.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

14 participants in 1 patient group

Mindful parenting intervention
Experimental group
Description:
There is only one arm in this study. A range of variables will first be measured (daily and weekly) over a baseline period in a group of participants. Following this baseline period, participants will be take part in a mindful parenting intervention whilst the same variables are measured. Following the intervention, there will be an 8-week follow-up period, and mindful parenting groups will not run during this time.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindful Parenting

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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