All in Dads! Healthy Marriage and Responsible Fatherhood Program Evaluation
- Conditions
- Fathers
- Registration Number
- NCT05194020
- Lead Sponsor
- Midwest Evaluation & Research
- Brief Summary
The purpose of this study is to help fathers establish and strengthen their relationship with their children and the mothers of their children; to reduce domestic violence in vulnerable families; to improve economic stability of fathers through comprehensive, job-driven career services; to employ intensive case management barrier removal, individual job coaching, and comprehensive family development to improve short and long-term outcomes.
- Detailed Description
After being informed about the study and giving consent, participants will enroll in a five-week All in Dads! program that collects data at enrollment, at the end of the program, and 12 months following the program. Research questions in this study are framed by a Descriptive Evaluation Design to assess whether outcomes improve for low-income fathers who participate in the All in Dads! (AID!) Project. Primary and secondary outcomes are assessed before and after participants complete core curricula-Father Factor, The New Playbook, and Money Smart-and Job Readiness Coaching and Career Development as employment support services (pre to post). Primary outcome measures will indicate whether behavior improved for healthy family relationships (parent, co-parent, and partner) and economic stability (financial, employment). Secondary outcome measures will indicate whether behavior improved for the attitudes and expectations that facilitate and reflect behavior for healthy family relationships and economic stability.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- Male
- Target Recruitment
- 731
- Adult (age 18 and older)
- Father/father figure
- Reside in Franklin County, Ohio
- Minor (under the age of 18)
- Not a father/father figure
- Reside outside of Franklin County, Ohio
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Healthy Parenting Behavior Measurement #1 Change in mean from baseline in behavior in parenting behavior (interaction with children) to mean at 12 months from enrollment. 1A) Will participants report significantly healthier parenting behavior after completing primary educational services and employment support services?
7 items engage w/child measured on the Healthy Parenting Behavior Scale #1.
The scale was 1-5 and as follows:
1=Never, 2=1 to 2 days per month, 3=3 or 4 days per month, 4=2 or 3 days per week, 5=Every day or almost every day
1 item- frequency reach out to children (categories, 4-point scale); Measured on the Healthy Parenting Behavior Scale #2
1=Every day or almost every day, 2=One to three times a week, 3=One to three times in the past month, 4=Never in the past month
The 8 items are measured as a construct. All items are added together and divided by 8 to create the construct score. The higher the score, the better the outcome.
maximum score of 4.5, minimum score of 1.0Healthy Co-parenting Behavior Measurement #1 Change from baseline in co-parenting behavior at 12 months from enrollment. 2\) Will participants report significantly healthier co-parenting behavior after completing primary educational services and employment support services?
Co-parenting behavior:
11 items: frequency of agreement with key co-parenting behaviors (interval, 5-point scale)
Measured on the Healthy Co-Parenting Behavior Scale #1 as:
1. Strongly Disagree
2. Disagree
3. Neutral
4. Agree
5. Strongly Agree
Individually, for five items, the higher the score the better. Six items are reverse scored, the lower the rating, the better the score.
The construct is created by adding all scores together and dividing by 11. The higher the score on a scale of 1-5, the better the outcome. The lower the score, the worse the outcome.Healthy Financial Behavior Measurement #1 Change from baseline in father financial behavior at 12 months from enrollment. 3\) Will participants report significantly healthier financial behavior after completing primary educational services and employment support services?
Father financial behavior:
2 items: yes or no questions for have resume, checking/savings accounts (dichotomous)
Numbers reported in the results are counts of yes (participant has a checking account and participant has a savings account).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Healthy Parenting Attitudes Measurement #1 Change in parenting attitudes (towards children) from enrollment to completion of the program (post-survey). 4\) Will participants report significantly healthier parenting attitudes after completing primary educational services and employment support services?
Parenting attitudes (toward children) 7 items: frequency of key attitudes (categories, 5-point scale)
Measured on the Healthy Parenting Attitudes Scale #1 as:
1. Always
2. Often
3. Sometimes
4. Rarely
5. Never
A construct is created by adding the score of the 7 items together and dividing by 7.
Maximum score=5 (7\*5/7), minimum score=1.0 (1\*7/7)
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Action for Children
🇺🇸Columbus, Ohio, United States
Action for Children🇺🇸Columbus, Ohio, United States