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Clinical Trials/NCT04440657
NCT04440657
Active, not recruiting
Not Applicable

Self-assured Parents - a Parenting Support Program for Immigrant Parents With Teenage Children Living in Deprived Areas

University West, Sweden1 site in 1 country16 target enrollmentMarch 17, 2021

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Parenting
Sponsor
University West, Sweden
Enrollment
16
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change in Parental Self-efficacy
Status
Active, not recruiting
Last Updated
2 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Parents have the primary responsibility for child socialization and development, but not all parents have the same possibilities to promote their children's positive development. Immigrant parents living in deprived areas often worry about their children's safety and future, at the same time as they have difficulties facilitating the best development potential for their children. Social services can help parents and their children to attain more promising developmental outcomes through focus on early preventive parenting support efforts, but these efforts need to be culturally tailored for the best possible results. For this reason, social services in the municipality of Örebro developed a culturally sensitive parenting support program aimed at immigrant parents living in deprived areas, who are worried that their children (age 12-18) engage in or will be exposed to harmful environments.

The Self-Assured Parenting Program (SAP) offers support to these parents by building on protective factors and strengthening parents in their parenting through focus on parenting competence and parent-child communication.

The purpose of SAP is to increase parents' self-confidence and communication between parents and their teenagers as well as to reduce parents' worries through activities that have a clear focus on empowerment and knowledge of child development. This multi-design project aims to test the implementation and effect of TF in Örebro and other Swedish municipalities with similar problems through observation, interviews with parents and groupleaders/managers as well as longitudinal effect measurements of parenting competence, parent-child communication and worries about their children's psychosocial development. This project will allow a partnership between social workers and researchers to be formed in order to generate practice-based evidence about implementation of support to deprived parents, which can be used in the context of everyday social service practice.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
March 17, 2021
End Date
June 30, 2024
Last Updated
2 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
Female

Investigators

Sponsor
University West, Sweden
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • parents of adolescent Children
  • immigrant background

Exclusion Criteria

  • parents of younger Children
  • Swedish background

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in Parental Self-efficacy

Time Frame: 6 months

Parental self-efficacy will be assessed at 7 time points by the Parenting Sense of Competence in Parenting Scale (PSOC , Gilmore \& C uskelly, 2009; Osman, 2017). The scale has subscales measuring satisfaction in parenting (9 items) (e.g. "Although parenting can be rewarding, I am frustrated now that the child is the age he/she is") and parental selfefficacy (7 items) (e.g. " I think I have what it takes to be a good parent to my child"). Answers are provided on 6-point Likert scales (1 - fully agree to 6 - completely disagree).

Change in Parents' worries

Time Frame: 6 months

Parents' worries (Van Zalk et al., 2018) about their children will be assessed at 7 time points on a scale comprising six questions (e.g. "Are you worried that your child will get caught by the police?") answered on a 5-point Likert scale (1 - yes, always to 5 - no, never).

Change in Parent-child communication

Time Frame: 6 months

Parent-child communication (Kerr \& Stattin, 2000) will be assessed at 7 time points using an instrument with 22 questions measuring 1) Parent knowledge of child whereabouts (6 items) (e.g. "Do you know what places the child visits when he/she is out with his friends in the evenings?") 2) Parent control (5 items) (e.g. "Does the child need permission to stay out late on a weekday evening?") 3) Parent solicitation (6 questions) (e.g. "Do you ask the child to tell you about things that happen in his/her spare time?") and C hild Disclosure (5 items) (e.g. "When the child has been out one evening, does he/she want to tell you about what she/he has done?"). A 5-point Likert scale (1 - almost never to 5 - very often) will be used.

Study Sites (1)

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