Evaluation of the Mother-Child Educational Program (MOCEP) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
NCT ID: NCT04378894
Last Updated: 2020-09-18
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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UNKNOWN
NA
200 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2019-09-01
2020-12-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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In Saudi Arabia, youth represents almost 50% of the population and those \< 5 years of age account for 10.6% (GaStat, 2019). As for the crude birth rate among the Saudi population, it hits 17.23 live children for every 1,000 persons. Thus, the government has stressed the importance of investing in national programs that focus on childhood within the scope of the 2030 vision. MOCEP was implemented in Saudi Arabia by the Child Care Association (CCA) which is an NGO established in 2006. The CCA's main objective is to promote Early Child Development (ECD) through the MOCEP since 2011.
The purpose of the present evaluation study--a collaboration between CCA and KAIMRC--is to evaluate the impact of MOCEP on child and parent outcomes among families in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, using a randomized wait-list controlled trial. Specifically, the aim of the study is to empirically assess the impact of MOCEP on maternal and child outcomes and to explore key moderators of the programmatic impact including characteristics of the program implementation and contextual characteristics.
Specific Objective 1: We will characterize the impact of MOCEP on child outcomes including executive function, social-emotional skills, and cognitive skills such as emergent numeracy, literacy and verbal skills.
Specific Objective 2: We will characterize the impact of MOCEP on parental knowledge, attitudes, practices, and skills.
A comprehensive sociodemographic characterization of participating mothers and children will be conducted. Maternal and child outcomes will be measured before and after the intervention. Maternal outcomes will include knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding parenting, child development, and education; disciplinary style; wellbeing; social support; and empowerment. Child outcomes will include executive function, social-emotional skills, nutritional status, and school readiness. Mothers will complete a demographic questionnaire at baseline to characterize social, demographic, home, family, and community characteristics. Mothers will also complete a battery addressing parenting and child development-related knowledge, attitudes and practices at baseline and endline.
The assessors will use IDELA which provides a direct measure of children's learning and development and assesses child school readiness through a holistic exploration of children's early literacy, math, problem-solving, social-emotional development, and gross and fine motor skills. The tool is available in Arabic and has been validated in multiple countries.
To assess the social-emotional skills of children, in addition to the IDELA subtest, we will apply the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. This parent-report measure assesses children's emotional and conduct problems, hyperactivity, and peer relations.
The Disciplinary Style Questionnaire (DSQ), a parent-report measure of parental disciplinary style, will be used to assess the frequency with which parents engage in seven forms of discipline when dealing with children's undesirable behavior: inductive discipline, physical punishment, manipulating privileges, harsh verbal discipline, argument, shaming, and ignoring. These outcomes will be measured before and after implementation of the 25 weeks MOCEP program.
Process evaluation:
Program dosage: will be measured by mothers' attendance at training sessions and the number of sessions delivered by group leaders will be collected using attendance sheets.
Program engagement: will be measured by a set of items that will be developed by the Yale study team, based on constructs examined in other studies (Durlak \& DuPre, 2008; Reyes et aL, 2012). The tool measuring program engagement will be administered to both parents and group leaders participating in MOCEP.
Program quality: will be measured with observational tools and self-report measures. An ethnographer will be present during the training to document facets such as trainer responsiveness to parents' needs, clarity of delivery, trainer motivation, parent engagement, and group cohesion. Also, supervisors will complete the MOCEP Supervisor's Checklist; supervisors and parents will rate the overall quality of training using items developed by the research team. Finally, MOCEP curriculum worksheets will be used to determine the degree to which mothers deliver the program as intended in their homes.
Data will be collected in paper forms by trained assessors and then entered into a secured electronic database prepared by KAIMRC using the KoBo Toolbox program.
Sample size: We aim to recruit 100 mother-child dyads for the wait-list control and 100 mother-child dyads for the intervention group.
Sampling technique: The target population will be recruited based on the catchment areas for the program in the Riyadh area (convenience sampling). We will randomize the enrolled participants to the intervention and control groups.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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MOCEP
MOCEP is implemented over a period of 25 weeks, through weekly group meetings that last approximately three hours.
MOCEP
Through parent support and an evidence-based curriculum, MOCEP uses education to reduce risk factors that hinder children's health and wellbeing.
Waitlist Control Group
For ethical reasons, no one recruited will be excluded from the opportunity to benefit from the intervention. MOCEP group will be the primary intervention group and the second group will act as the wait-listed control group. Families in the wait-listed control group will participate in a special awareness program but not MOCEP. Although the families in the wait-listed control group will start as a control group (not receiving the intervention), they will have the opportunity to participate in the intervention in a later round of implementation, after the intervention group has completed the program.
MOCEP
Through parent support and an evidence-based curriculum, MOCEP uses education to reduce risk factors that hinder children's health and wellbeing.
Interventions
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MOCEP
Through parent support and an evidence-based curriculum, MOCEP uses education to reduce risk factors that hinder children's health and wellbeing.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Mothers must be literate.
* Mothers must be living in the designated implementation areas in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
* Mothers must agree to attend the MOCEP program and complete questionnaires at the beginning and the end of the program
Exclusion Criteria
3 Years
9 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Yale University
OTHER
King Abdullah International Medical Research Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Maha Muneef
professor of pediatrics infectious Diseases
Principal Investigators
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majid aljeraisy, PHD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
riyadh , saudi arabia
Locations
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Woman and Child Association
Riyadh, , Saudi Arabia
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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RC17/259/R
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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