'Effectively Intervening in Traumatized Parents and Young Children After Structural Domestic Violence: A Multiple Baseline Analysis'

NCT ID: NCT06065865

Last Updated: 2025-04-01

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

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

10 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-05-23

Study Completion Date

2025-10-31

Brief Summary

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The goal of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an individualized treatment trajectory in which the order of trauma therapy for the parent (Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy), trauma therapy for the child (EMDR therapy) and attachment-based therapy (Dutch short-term intervention for atypical parenting behavior (NIKA)) is tailored towards the complex needs of victimized parents and their young children (4-6 y/o) after domestic violence. The treatment trajectory is based on a guidance document that supports therapists to determine the optimal order of interventions based on a standardized set of factors. The primary goals of this study are:

1. To examine how post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-symptoms of parent and child and parental sensitive and disruptive parenting behavior develop and interact over time, while they follow the individualized treatment trajectory.
2. To test whether the start of the treatment trajectory (e.g. the phase in which parents can receive NIKA and EMDR therapy and their child can receive EMDR therapy) leads to a decrease in disruptive parenting behavior towards the child, an increase in sensitive parenting behavior towards the child, and a decrease in PTSD symptoms of the parent in comparison to the baseline phase.
3. To test whether the start of the treatment trajectory (e.g. the phase in which children can receive EMDR therapy and their parent can receive NIKA and EMDR therapy) leads to a decrease in PTSD symptoms of the child in comparison to the baseline phase.

Detailed Description

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Rationale:

While the adverse effects of domestic violence on victimized parents and children have been extensively documented, there is still little knowledge on effective intervention approaches for these families. Both parents and children are at risk to develop trauma-related psychopathology after domestic violence. In addition, victimized parents are likely to show disrupted parenting due to their own traumatization (resulting from domestic violence and often also from their own traumatic childhood). This increases the risk for developing a disturbed attachment relationship for the child. Treatment should thus focus at improvement on three levels (parenting behavior and post-traumatic stress (PTSD) symptoms of the parent and the child), and can consist of trauma therapy for parent and child and attachment-based therapy. Since the symptoms in different families may exhibit in different ways, and can interact with each other in a different way, an individualized treatment trajectory that takes these interactions in account may be necessary to allow for maximum symptom reduction.

Study design:

The hypotheses will be tested using a single case experimental design (SCED) study, with a non-concurrent, randomized multiple baseline design. Families who receive treatment after experiencing severe domestic violence will be randomly assigned to a baseline length of 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 or 8 weeks (phase 1), and randomization will occur for two sets of five participants. After the end of the baseline phase, the intervention phase will start, during which dyads will follow an individualized treatment trajectory, consisting of different treatments (phase 2), including EMDR therapy for parent and child to reduce their PTSD symptoms and NIKA to reduce disrupted parenting behavior and increase sensitive parenting behavior. The dyads will participate in weekly appointments throughout the whole duration of the study (both baseline and treatment phase).

Study population:

This study will include 10 parent-child dyads who are residing at a community shelter location in the Netherlands after experiencing domestic violence. Parents with children aged between 4-6 years old will be included if both the parent and the child experience clinically important PTSD-symptoms (based on self-report of the parent). In case that not enough parent-child dyads can be recruited, based on the eligible age range of the child, the age range for the children will be widened, so that children aged between 3-6 years can participate.

Conditions

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Domestic Violence PTSD

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

The current study has a single case experimental design (SCED), more specifically, a non-concurrent multiple baseline design.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Guidance document

The intervention that is investigated in this study is a guidance document, which is used to individualize the treatment trajectory for the parent-child dyad. This guidance document includes different factors that are important in deciding on the order of different types of therapy within one treatment trajectory. The document will guide the therapist in tailoring the treatment trajectory towards the needs of the dyad. The treatment trajectory can consist of EMDR-therapy for the parent, EMDR therapy for the child and NIKA for the parent-child relationship. The guidance document will guide the therapist in deciding on the order of the different therapies.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Guidance document

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The main intervention of interest is the guidance document, which is explained under 'Arms'. Within the treatment trajectory, that is based on the guidance document, the participants can receive a combination of NIKA, and parent and child can both get EMDR-therapy. The therapies are combined in one treatment trajectory.

NIKA consists of 5 weekly sessions during which participants are videotaped by a trained therapist. The therapist will provide personalized feedback to the parent, which is focused on reducing disrupted parenting behavior and increasing sensitive parenting behavior. EMDR is a brief trauma therapy (in this trial a maximum of six 90-min sessions for the parent and a maximum of six 60-min sessions for the child) aimed at reducing the negative load of the memories of traumatic events. Both parent and child can receive this therapy. During the weekly sessions, the participant is asked to bring the traumatic event to mind while the therapist provides a distracting task.

Interventions

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Guidance document

The main intervention of interest is the guidance document, which is explained under 'Arms'. Within the treatment trajectory, that is based on the guidance document, the participants can receive a combination of NIKA, and parent and child can both get EMDR-therapy. The therapies are combined in one treatment trajectory.

NIKA consists of 5 weekly sessions during which participants are videotaped by a trained therapist. The therapist will provide personalized feedback to the parent, which is focused on reducing disrupted parenting behavior and increasing sensitive parenting behavior. EMDR is a brief trauma therapy (in this trial a maximum of six 90-min sessions for the parent and a maximum of six 60-min sessions for the child) aimed at reducing the negative load of the memories of traumatic events. Both parent and child can receive this therapy. During the weekly sessions, the participant is asked to bring the traumatic event to mind while the therapist provides a distracting task.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* The non-offending parent and child are residing in a community shelter because of a combination of problems that includes severe domestic violence
* The child is aged between 4-6 years old (if there is more than 1 child in this age range in the family, the parent will be asked to report on the symptoms of both children, and the child with the most severe PTSD symptoms will participate)
* The parent experiences clinically important PTSD-symptoms, as defined by a PCL-score of ≥31
* The child experiences PTSD-symptoms on a clinical level, as defined by a CATS-score of ≥15

Exclusion Criteria

* Parents with extreme mental health problems (e.g., psychosis) that directly affect their ability to participate in an intervention and require immediate intervention for the parent
Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Universiteit Leiden

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Lenneke Alink

Prof. dr.

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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HVO Querido

Amsterdam, , Netherlands

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Netherlands

Central Contacts

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Willemien van den Dorpel

Role: CONTACT

+317 1527 3667

Facility Contacts

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Role: primary

+3120 561 90 90

Other Identifiers

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NL84677.018.23

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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