Using Technology to Augment the Implementation and Effectiveness of PCIT
NCT ID: NCT01294488
Last Updated: 2013-05-08
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE2
317 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2007-01-31
2011-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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OUHSC/CCAN researchers have pilot- and feasibility tested a system using internet-based telemedicine technology to deliver live, mentored PCIT training. OUHSC/CCAN researchers have piloted Remote Real-Time (RRT) training at sites in Utah, Seattle, Alaska, Oregon, and Oklahoma. Feasibility appears excellent, and the approach has been well received. Moreover, RRT implementation revealed misapplications of the model that had gone unaddressed in phone consultation. This research project will make use of planned, funded PCIT start-up implementations at 20-24 agency sites in Washington and Oklahoma. Study participants will include agency practitioners engaged in implementing the PCIT model and families receiving PCIT services at these community agencies. Using a multilevel interrupted time series randomized design; the study will compare the RRT implementation approach with standard phone consultation (PC). Outcomes will include practitioner fidelity and competency in implementing PCIT, practitioner acceptance and satisfaction with PCIT, and family outcomes of parental skill acquisition, parent satisfaction, child aggressive and oppositional behaviors, and rates of future child welfare abuse reports. A mediational model is proposed in which differences in client outcomes are mediated by improved practitioner fidelity and competency. Cost effectiveness and practitioner response to the implementation approach will be examined. The study thus will inform strategies for facilitating widespread dissemination and implementation with fidelity of the evidence-based PCIT model, thereby making the model available to a broader range of agencies and practitioners working with at-risk families.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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Phone Consultation
Therapists receive phone consultation for 6 months during the course of the project.
Parent-Child Interaction Therapy
Therapists receive training in Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) and receive supervision in their implementation of PCIT skills via phone consultation and polycommunication technology, each for 6 months.
Remote Real-Time Consultation
Therapists receive consultation for 6 months via polycommunication technology.
Parent-Child Interaction Therapy
Therapists receive training in Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) and receive supervision in their implementation of PCIT skills via phone consultation and polycommunication technology, each for 6 months.
Interventions
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Parent-Child Interaction Therapy
Therapists receive training in Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) and receive supervision in their implementation of PCIT skills via phone consultation and polycommunication technology, each for 6 months.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* The agency should identify a minimum of three staff for PCIT training (with two staff members acceptable from very small agencies that do not have three child service providers), at least one of which is a supervisor. Licensed mental health practitioner staff with a Master's degree or higher are strongly preferred, although exceptions may be made in cases where agencies do not have Master's level staff. (For example, some agencies conducting culturally relevant programs for minority or rural populations are not always able to employ licensed mental health provider staff. Because RRT may be especially salient for some of these agencies, these agencies will not be excluded from the study.)
* The agency should be committed to providing the resources and staff availability to complete the basic PCIT training package, standard PC consultation, and staff participation in approximately six months of RRT training.
* The agency should have or be in the process of developing the physical infrastructure to deliver PCIT. Physical infrastructure includes PCIT rooms with sound equipment, bug-in-the-ear equipment, and video recording equipment.
* The agency will need to have a dedicated broadband internet line for the RRT equipment.
* The agency should be able to demonstrate that it has or will develop a referral network sufficient to provide enough PCIT cases so that therapists can develop mastery. This can include referral commitments and support from local child welfare offices, courts, schools, and so forth. If the agency plans to serve child welfare parents whose children are in foster care, it is imperative that there are firm commitments for a transportation plan. Preliminary work may be necessary to gain the cooperation of child welfare and courts to insure that service plans and court orders are consistent with PCIT (i.e. allowing joint parent-child sessions).
* The agency agrees that basic PCIT training will meet OUHSC training guidelines (to be described later).
* If clients consent to participate, the agency agrees to archive video recordings of all PCIT sessions and basic PCIT clinical measures from clients.
* The agency is in a state that agrees to provide OUHSC with child welfare outcome data.
* In the event the agency's PCIT start-up plan requires that they begin PCIT services prior to the start of the study, they will commence archiving session and client data so that early session fidelity and competency and client outcomes can be tracked. Standard PC consultation will be provided until the study begins. Session- and client-level data are routinely collected as part of PCIT implementation, to guide clinical intervention and assure quality of services. However, no data will be used for research purposes unless therapists and clients provide informed consent for its use.
* The study will retain the right to involuntarily remove an agency and its therapists from the study if PCIT implementation and data collection at the agency proves infeasible.
20 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
FED
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Beverly Funderburk, Ph.D.
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
OUHSC
Locations
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OUHSC
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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CDC-NCIPC-5085
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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