The Effective Parenting Program (EPP)

NCT ID: NCT05135507

Last Updated: 2021-11-26

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

WITHDRAWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-09-01

Study Completion Date

2022-12-31

Brief Summary

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The Phase I objective is to determine the feasibility of the EPP program by examining user responses to the first three units of EPP's nine interactive training modules. This feasibility evaluation will track and analyze individual program usage and examine changes in parents' psychological flexibility, parents' stress, parenting self-efficacy, parents' mindfulness and child behavior in a within subject pretest and posttest design with 50 parents of children who have DD. Qualifying parents will complete a baseline assessment and then be directed to our online learning platform to complete the interactive learning activities. This test of the Phase I prototype is intended to approximate the conditions under which the complete product will be marketed and used.

Detailed Description

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Parents who have children with developmental disabilities (DD) commonly experience high levels of stress related to child behavior problems and contextual issues related to the child's disability that can have a detrimental effect on their parenting. Current stress management programs for this population of parents often do not lead to a reduction in children's behavior problems and Behavioral Parent Training programs (BPT) do not always lead to a reduction in stress. Interventions that combine the two approaches are more effective, providing substantial benefits to both parent and child. The central goal of this project is to create an online, interactive stress reduction and BPT program: The Effective Parenting Program (EPP): An Integrated Parenting Intervention for Families of Children with Developmental Disabilities. The investigators propose three Specific Aims with the primary aims of reducing parents' stress and strengthening parents' parenting efficacy and psychological flexibility. The investigators secondary aims are designed to answer questions regarding (a) the influence of changes in parents' efficacy and psychological flexibility on child behavior and (b) the role of parents' attention to and awareness of present moment experiences. This work is significant because it will provide resources for an underserved population - parents of children with DD -- who experience frequent stress with the challenges of raising a child with DD and who may lack basic behavioral parenting skills. Moreover, the proposed program has the potential to broadly impact the way supports are delivered to parents of children with DD by adding an integrated, efficacious intervention that overcomes common barriers to parental participation (time, finances, and availability). From a public health perspective, this approach is ideally structured to meet the needs of this population of parents who are in need of easy to implement and cost effective support and training.

Upon completion in Phase II, parents will have access to a complete EPP program, designed to help parents cope with stress more effectively and strengthen their behavioral parenting skills. The program will provide parents with engaging, interactive content, including: tools for monitoring progress, text prompts and incentives to motivate behavior change, a mechanism for the sharing of social support, guidance in setting effective value-based goals, strategies for reducing stress, and training in evidence-based parenting skills. The EPP program will be available on a mobile website that can be accessed by smart phones, tablets and computers and will provide realistic situational videos vignettes, workbook exercises and a discussion forum to help parents deal effectively with stress and challenging behaviors. In Phase I of this project, the investigators will determine the feasibility of the program by examining primary and secondary outcomes related to a prototype of the EEP program.

Conditions

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Parent-Child Relations

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Within subject pre and posttest design
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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An interactive stress reduction and behavioral parent training program

This feasibility evaluation will track and analyze individual program usage and examine changes in parents' psychological flexibility, parents' stress, parenting self-efficacy, parents' mindfulness and child behavior in a within subject pretest and posttest design with 50 parents of children who have DD

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

An integrated parenting intervention for families of children with developmental disabilities

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Deliver three training modules to parent and track program usage, psychological flexibility, parents' stress, parents mindfulness, and child behavior

Interventions

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An integrated parenting intervention for families of children with developmental disabilities

Deliver three training modules to parent and track program usage, psychological flexibility, parents' stress, parents mindfulness, and child behavior

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Parents of children with developmental disabilities having a child with Developmental Disabilities who lives at home (50% of parents will have a child with autism and 50% will have a child with intellectual disabilities,
* Must have access to a phone that can receive text messages and an Internet connection,
* Stress levels being elevated (i.e., greater than .5 standard deviations above the normative data mean score) on a 12 item Parental distress sub scale of the Parenting Stress Index- short form.

Exclusion Criteria

* Parents of children without a developmental disability
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Double S Instructonal Systems

INDUSTRY

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Other Identifiers

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EPPPhaseI

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id