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Minding the Baby is an intensive and preventive home-visiting programme that helps vulnerable or high risk mothers. MTB is delivered by an interdisciplinary team. Ten Danish sites will be randomized to training at time 1 or 2 and recruit usual care control families before they receive the training. Families are assessed before they give birth and when their child is three months, one and two years old with a range of assessments including maternal sensitivity, parent mental Health, child development, and health related register data. The aim of the trial is to assess the effectiveness of Minding the Baby to improve mother-child relations and the mental health of parents and children.
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Minding the Baby is an intensive and preventive home-visiting programme that helps vulnerable or high risk mothers. The focus of the intervention is to reduce negative infant and maternal outcomes and strengthen the attachment relationship. MTB is delivered by an interdisciplinary team of highly skilled practitioners, who have health and social work experience, integrating advanced practice nursing and mental health care for mothers and infants. In the proposed Randomised Control Trial (RCT) the investigators will study the efficacy of this innovative intervention across ten Danish sites. Site staff will be trained at two sessions one year apart. Sites are randomized to training at time 1 or 2. All sites will recruit treatment as usual control families before they receive the training and start offering the intervention to all families. Potential participants will be approached by a local front staff member (e.g. midwife, helath visitor or social worker) who will inform mothers of the project in the early pregnancy. Consenting eligible participants will be assessed before they give birth and when their child is three months, one and two years old.
The effectiveness of the MTB programme will be evaluated by assessing a range of maternal and infant outcomes, including maternal sensitivity, parent mental Health, child development, and register data on e.g. infant maltreatment and neglect, hospitalization, income, immunization. By combining parent report, observational and register data researchers will get a unique opportunity to advance knowledge regarding effective ways to support some of the youngest and most vulnerable children in Denmark.
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256 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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