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| Name | Class |
|---|---|
| PRIMA | UNKNOWN |
| Psykologpartners | UNKNOWN |
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The main aim of this pilot trial is to evaluate preliminary effects and feasibility of a new parent training program for parents of children aged 8-16 years with disruptive behavior (e.g., angry, aggressive or defiant behavior). The parent training program is based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and includes practicing of skills in virtual reality (VR).
The main questions the project aims to answer are:
The CBT-VR parenting program is delivered at clinics during individual sessions. Parents will answer quantitative measurements before, during, and after treatment. Within-group analyses will be conducted to examine experiences and preliminary effects of the program. Parents and clinicians are also asked to participate in a qualitative interview after the program has ended.
BACKGROUND:
Parent training programs based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) have shown positive effects for reducing child behavior problems, such as oppositional defiant and aggressive behaviors, and are often recommended as a first intervention. The focus of CBT-based parenting programs are e.g. to reduce negative parent-child interactions and increase positive communication.
Recently, studies have evaluated CBT with the addition of exercises and role-playing in virtual reality (VR), for instance for adults with anxiety or anger. VR can provide a safe and gradual platform to practice in environments and situations. The present project evaluates a CBT-based parenting program, which includes practicing of skills in VR.
PURPOSE AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS:
The aim of this project is to evaluate preliminary effects and feasibility of a CBT-VR parent training program. The specific research questions are as follows:
METHODS:
This project consists of a small pilot study of a CBT-VR parent training program for parents with children aged 8-16 years (n=10 families). The design is based on a mixed-methods approach. Evaluation of the intervention is conducted using within-group design (repeated measurements before, during, and after the intervention).
Parents will be recruited through clinics and advertisements. They are directed to a webpage with information about the study and contact information to the researchers. Parents give written informed consent to participate. When parents are interested in participating, a member of the research team will contact the participant for screening of inclusion and exclusion criteria. Clinicians at the respective clinics will be invited to answer questions regarding experiences of delivering the program.
The treatments are evaluated quantitatively by the parents using validated assessment forms/single questions before, during, and after interventions. Additionally, qualitative interviews will be conducted with parents and clinicians who provide consent to participating in an interview.
In another, separate study we evaluate CBT and role-plays in VR for children: "Pilot study of cognitive behavior therapy with role-plays in virtual reality for children with anger problems".
POWER CALCULATION:
The quantitative and qualitative data that will be collected with ten families is considered sufficient to provide understanding and preliminary insight into acceptability, usability, relevance, and effectiveness.
ANALYSES:
The plan is to compare changes during the intervention using paired t-tests, descriptive statistics, description of reliable and clinical change, and calculation of effect sizes. If appropriate, non-parametric alternatives will be employed. The qualitative analyses will be conducted using content analysis or thematic analysis.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent training with cognitive behavior therapy and virtual reality | Experimental | A parent training program with between 6 and 10 individual, face-to-face, weekly sessions with parent |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step-by-step: A cognitive behavioral parent program with role-plays in virtual reality | Behavioral | A parent training program based on social learning theory and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), incorporating virtual reality for training in brief role plays. The program includes similar strategies as other common CBT-parent training programs for parents of children with behavior problems, with the difference that virtual reality is used as an additional way to practice skills. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in behavior problems on parent-ratings of the Disruptive Behavior Disorder scale (oppositional defiant disorder subscale). | The Disruptive Behavior Disorder subscale "Oppositional defiant disorder" is used for assessing children's behavioral problems. The subscale includes 8 items which are rated on a 4-point scale (0 to 3). The scale sum ranges från 0 to a total maximum sum of 24. A higher score indicates more behavior problems. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parenting on parent-ratings of the Parenting Children and Adolescents Scale | The Parenting Children and Adolescent Scale has three subscales: encouragement of positive behaviors, setting limits, proactive parenting behaviors. The 21 items are scored on a 5-point scale (1 to 5) and the total scale sum ranges from 21 to a maximum of 105, with a higher score indicating more positive parenting. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parenting on parent-ratings of the Parenting Children and Adolescents Scale: Impact scale | The 21 items included in the Parenting Children and Adolescents Scale each include a question of whether the item is experienced as a problem (yes/no). Total scale sum ranges between 0 and 21 with a higher sum indicating larger impact. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parent-ratings of child wellbeing on the KIDSCREEN-10 | The KIDSCREEN-10 evaluates how parents perceive their child's/adolescent's health and well-being. The 10 items are scored on a 5-point scale (1 to 5). The total maximum sum ranges between 10 and 50 with a higher score indicating greater child wellbeing and health-related quality of life. The scale also includes an overall question about how the child is feeling in general. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Background information | Parents are asked for concise demographic information about themselves (e.g., age, education) and their child (e.g., age). A total of 8 questions. | Pre-intervention |
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Parents:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA
Parent treatment:
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| Name | Role | Phone | Extension | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pia Enebrink, PhD | Contact | +46852487738 | pia.enebrink@ki.se |
| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Pia Enebrink | Karolinska Institutet | Principal Investigator |
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| Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parent-ratings of child wellbeing on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) | The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) is used to assess mental health through a total difficulties score as well as through the five subscales (peer relationship problems, prosocial behavior, emotional symptoms, hyperactivity/inattention, conduct problems). The items are scored on a 3-point scale (0 to 2), and the total difficulties score is generated by summing all subscales except the prosocial scale. The summary score ranges from 0 to 40. Higher summary scores indicate more problems. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parent-ratings of emotion regulation on the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale-16 | General emotion regulation ability will be measured with the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (brief version). The 16 items are scored on a 5-point scale (1 to 5), and the total summary score ranges between 16 and 80. A higher score indicates larger difficulties with emotion regulation. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change from baseline in parent-ratings of parental emotion regulation on the Parent Emotion Regulation Scale | Emotion regulation of the parent will be measured with the Parent Emotion Regulation Scale. The 20 items are scored on a 5-point scale (1 to 5). A total summary score ranges between 20 and 100 where a higher score indicates better regulation of emotions. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change in parent-ratings of family warmth | Family warmth is measured with 5 questions from the Family Check-Up Caregiver Assessment Scale. These are scored on a 5-point scale (1 to 5). Total maximum score ranges between 5 and 25. A higher score indicates a more positive relation. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change in parent-ratings of family conflicts | Family conflicts are measured with 3 questions from the Family Check-Up Caregiver Assessment Scale. These are scored on a 7-point scale (0 to 6). Total maximum score ranges between 0 and 18. A higher score indicates larger degree of conflicts. | Pre- and post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Parent: Mean change in parent-ratings of parental satisfaction with the week | Three questions scored 0 to 10 about parents' satisfaction with the week, with how they have been able to support their child and manage conflicts. Total maximum score ranges between 0-30, with a higher score indicating higher satisfaction. | From baseline to post-intervention (during 6-10 weeks). Completed once a week at each session. |
| Parent: Parental experiences of each session | Four questions after each session about how the parent experienced the session and exercises. Rated on a scale 0-10, with a maximum total score ranging between 0 and 40. A higher score indicates greater satisfaction with the session. | From baseline to post-intervention (during 6-10 weeks). Completed once a week at each session. |
| Parent: Closing questions about the intervention | Closing questions to parents about satisfaction, relevance, and usefulness of the intervention. Parents respond to six questions rated on a scale 0-10, with a maximum total score ranging between 0 and 60. A higher score indicates greater satisfaction. | Post-intervention (measured 6 to 10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Use of the parent program: number of sessions, homework tasks, exercises | A summary of the mean number of sessions, homework tasks and exercises completed during the program. | From pre- to post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Use of the parent program: drop out rate | The drop out from the program (number of participants). | From pre- to post-intervention (10 weeks after the initiation of the intervention) |
| Clinicians: Clinician perception of implementation | Clinicians will respond to two questions rated 0-10 after each session about their implementation of the treatment session, higher scores indicating higher satisfaction (maximum weekly mean score is 20). | From pre- to post-intervention (during 6-10 weeks). |
| Parent, clinician: Experiences of the parenting program explored through separate, individual qualitative interviews with parent and clinician | Qualitative interviews will explore parent's and clinician's experiences of the treatment. We will investigate satisfaction, feasibility, acceptability, and relevance of the program. The interviews with parents are partly based on an established scale, modified for this purpose, and self-constructed questions. Interviews with clinicians are based on self-constructed oral questions examining acceptability, relevance, feasibility and satisfaction. | Interviews are conducted after the program is completed, 10 weeks after the initiation of each program |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D000066553 | Problem Behavior |
| D000096865 | Oppositional Defiant Disorder |
| D000374 | Aggression |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D001526 | Behavioral Symptoms |
| D001519 | Behavior |
| D002652 | Child Behavior |
| D019958 | Attention Deficit and Disruptive Behavior Disorders |
| D065886 | Neurodevelopmental Disorders |
| D001523 | Mental Disorders |
| D000096762 | Aberrant Motor Behavior in Dementia |
| D012919 | Social Behavior |
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