MedPath

Supporting Responsible Fatherhood Program (Fatherhood FIRE)

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Parenting
Family Relations
Father-Child Relations
Interventions
Behavioral: HERO Dads Program
Registration Number
NCT05311592
Lead Sponsor
Montefiore Medical Center
Brief Summary

Montefiore Medical Center (in partnership with BronxWorks) is implementing a large-scope program to promote responsible fatherhood in the Bronx among low-income adult (18 years or older) fathers with non-custodial children (under the age of 24). The program, called HERO Dads (Healthy, Empowered, Resilient, Open Dads), will promote responsible fatherhood by enhancing relationship and anger-management skills and providing marriage education; providing skills-based parenting education, disseminating information about good parenting practices, and encouraging child support payments (in partnership with our local OCSE); and fostering economic stability by providing employment-related supports inclusive of job search, vocational skills training, job referrals, and job retention.

Detailed Description

The program model is based on the premise that relationship and parenting skills can be taught, and will lead to improvements in relationships (knowledge about relationships, communication skills, stress management, reduction in destructive conflict), parenting (knowledge about child development, engagement with non-custodial children, effective parenting, co-parent communication, child well-being), and economic status (vocational skills, new employment or career advancement, financial literacy, child support). The investigator will provide core relationship and relationship education workshops using an empirically supported curriculum (24/7 Dad) plus employment workshops, numerous supplemental activities to promote responsible fatherhood, individualized vocational case management, and job-driven employment services. In total, the investigator expects to enroll 1,475 non-custodial fathers in the program and provide an average of 34 hours of total programming per participant (including 24 hours of core workshops), which the investigator believes is a sufficient dosage to detect impacts.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1475
Inclusion Criteria
  • Must be over 18 years of age
  • Must have a child under the age of 24
  • Must be a non-custodial parent or have shared custody
  • Income below 200% poverty line
Exclusion Criteria
  • Active intimate partner violence and increased risk of intimate partner violence.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Virtual (Zoom)HERO Dads ProgramParticipants will complete their intake process in person, but will complete all workshops virtually through Zoom.
In PersonHERO Dads ProgramParticipants will receive all services in person, including participating in the initial intake process, and attending all workshops.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Inventory of Father Involvement (IFI) (Father Involvement)Baseline

The IFI49, is a 26-item self-report instrument that assesses indirect and direct involvement using a 7- point Likert scale ranging from 0 (very poor) to 6 (excellent). This measure addresses the 3 main domains of father involvement: engagement, accessibility, and responsibility. Overall scores can therefore range from 0 to 156. Higher scores represent increased levels of engagement. Reliability of subscales in the initial study ranged from α = .69 to α = .90.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Information, Family Outcomes, Reporting, and Management (nFORM) Pre-Program SurveyAt start of intervention (Week 1 of 4)

This is a survey developed by the Office of Family Assistance utilized by all grantees participating in the national study that includes questions regarding relationship satisfaction, financial stability, and parenting.

Parenting Alliance Inventory (PAI) (Quality of Co-Parenting Relationship)Baseline

The PAI46 is a self-report instrument that assesses the degree to which parents believe that they have a sound working relationship with their child's other parent using a 5- point Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly agree) to 5 (strongly disagree). All items are averaged to create a global parenting alliance score (α = .97). Higher scores indicate a stronger parenting alliance. This measure demonstrated excellent internal consistency and good construct and concurrent validity.

Information, Family Outcomes, Reporting, and Management (nFORM) Applicant CharacteristicsBaseline

This is a survey developed by the Office of Family Assistance utilized by all grantees participating in the national study, that gathers demographic information regarding participants.

Information, Family Outcomes, Reporting, and Management (nFORM) Post-Program SurveyImmediately post intervention (Week 4 of 4 weeks)

This is a survey developed by the Office of Family Assistance utilized by all grantees participating in the national study that includes questions regarding relationship satisfaction, financial stability, and parenting.

Child-Parent Relationship Scale Short Form (CPRS-SF) (Parent-Child Relationship Quality)Baseline

CPRS-SF48 is a self-report measure about the child and parent's interactions with child related to closeness and conflict. 15-items are rated on 5-point Likert scales. The ratings can be summed into groups of items corresponding to conflict and closeness subscales. The 8-item conflict subscale measures the degree to which a parent feels that his or her relationship with a child is characterized by negativity. Scores for conflict scale range from 8-40. Higher score on the conflict questions suggest parents feel their relationship with their child is characterized by negativity and a lower score is desirable. The 7-item closeness scale assesses the extent to which a parent feels that the relationship is characterized by warmth, affection, and open communication. Scores for closeness subscale range between 7-35. A higher score on the closeness questions suggest the parent/child relationship is characterized by warmth, affection and open communication and a higher score is desirable

Assessing Emotions Scale (Emotional Intelligence)Baseline

The Assessing Emotions Scale47 is a 33-item measure of emotional intelligence that uses a Likert scale of measurement (value 1 - 5, ranging from strongly disagree to strongly agree), calculated by summing the responses across all items. Higher scores indicate higher levels of emotional intelligence. This measure has demonstrated good internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and convergent validity.

Skills/Knowledge Assessment (Skills/Knowledge Acquisition)Change from Baseline Skills at immediately post intervention and at 6 months

The Skills/Knowledge Assessment is an outcome measure that will be developed by program staff together with the local evaluator. The measure will be a multiple-choice assessment using scenarios describing parent-child and co-parenting interactions to determine whether fathers have learned skills and techniques taught at workshops. This measure will be calculated by obtaining the percentage of correctly-scored items. Higher scores indicate great skill acquisition. Two versions of this assessment will be created to prevent practice effects. Given that this is a homegrown measure, to validate this measure, the investigators will correlate the skill assessment scores with the well validated Assessing Emotions Scale and assess whether relationship skill scores differ by key demographic and social economic factors.

Childhood Trauma Questionnaire Short Form (CTQ-SF) (Childhood Trauma)Baseline

The CTQ-SF45 is a 28-item measure of childhood trauma that uses a Likert scale of measurement ranging from 1 (never true) to 5 (very often true). Items are divided into 5 sub-categories: emotional abuse, physical abuse, sexual abuse, emotional neglect, and physical neglect. This measure is calculated by summing most responses and reverse scoring select items and has demonstrated good test-retest reliability, criterion-related validity, and internal consistency.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Montefiore Medical Center

🇺🇸

Bronx, New York, United States

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