MedPath

Connected Through Coaching for Flourishing Families

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Maltreatment by Parent
Interventions
Behavioral: Family Success Network
Registration Number
NCT06145451
Lead Sponsor
University of Pittsburgh
Brief Summary

Despite the known association between the quality of participant relational engagement with service providers and clinical outcomes, limited studies have examined caregiver Relational Responsiveness (RR) as a mechanism to achieve maltreatment prevention program outcomes. Using a realist-informed mixed method approach, this study will examine RR's role in mediating the effects of a community-based maltreatment prevention program, the Family Success Network (FSN) on protective factors against maltreatment and the contexts within which RR's mediation effects are activated or inhibited.

Detailed Description

Maltreatment prevention programs can promote public health by building protective factors among at-risk families. To maximize their benefits, programs should be delivered as intended by maintaining fidelity. Participant responsiveness (PR) is an under-studied fidelity construct defined as the degree to which participants "respond to or are engaged by" intervention at the behavioral, attitudinal, and relational levels. However, previous studies mostly focus on behavioral and attitudinal responsiveness such as attendance, follow-through, and satisfaction. The purpose of this study is to examine the role of participant Relational Responsiveness (RR) as a mechanism to increase protective factors against child maltreatment among the caregivers participating in the Family Success Network (FSN). The FSN is a community-based maltreatment prevention program piloted to serve 3 under-served counties in Ohio with high maltreatment rates. In FSN, coaches and families collaboratively develop a tailored plan of services designed to increase family protective factors. Focusing on primary and secondary prevention, FSN serves families with no history of substantiated maltreatment. Leveraging the parent study (clinicatrials registration currently in progress), which is a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) funded by the Children's Bureau, the proposed study will pursue the following aims; 1) To examine the structural validity of the Relational Responsiveness (RR) measure among FSN participants; 2) To determine the degree to which RR mediates FSN effects and whether RR's mediation effects are moderated by caregiver race and gender; 3) To identify contexts within which RR's mediation effects are activated or inhibited using a realist informed mixed-method approach. The parent study focuses on FSN outcome and process evaluations. Aims 1 and 2 of this study will utilize quantitative data collected through the parent RCT (protective factors and Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised). Aim 3 will use mixed data involving the quantitative data collected through the parent RCT and the qualitative data to be collected in this study.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
612
Inclusion Criteria
  • Being an adult primary caregiver living in the tri-county area
  • Having at least one child aged between 0-17
  • Reporting at least one maltreatment risk factor at the time of intake
  • Receiving family coaching services at Tier II and above in FSN.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Having a substantiated history of child maltreatment

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Treatment groupFamily Success NetworkThe Family Success Network is a multi-tier, multi-component community-based maltreatment prevention program that offers tailored preventive services for caregivers of children aged 0-18. Average lengths of service completion is approximately 3 months.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Protective factorsbaseline vs. 3 month (at the time of service completion)

The family protective factors will be assessed using the Protective Factors Survey - Second Edition (PFS-2). It is a 19-item, 5-point Likert scale assessing 1) Family Functioning/Resilience \[family's adaptive skills and strategies to persevere in times of crisis, 3 items, subscale score of 0-3\], 2) Nurturing/Attachment \[emotional bond and positive parent-child interactions, 4 items, subscale score of 0-4\]; 3) Concrete Supports \[perceived access to tangible goods and services, 2 items, subscale score of 0-8\]; 4) Social Supports \[4 items, subscale score of 0-16 plus the number of items checked in the social support checklist, which ranges between 0-4\]. Except for the concrete support subscale in which higher scores indicate lower level of concrete support, higher scores indicate higher level of assessed qualities in all the other subscales.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Relational Responsivenessbaseline vs. 3 month (at the time of service completion)

Participant relational responsiveness (RR) will be assessed using the Working Alliance Inventory Short-Revised (WAI-SR), which is a 12-item, 5-point Likert scale with the response categories ranging from "Seldom" to "Always". WAI consists of three domains including agreement on goals, agreement on tasks, and bond between clients and providers. Instead of aggregating multiple items into a continuous variable, RR will be treated as a single order continuous latent construct with 3 distinct domains.

Trial Locations

Locations (3)

Case Western Reserve University

🇺🇸

Cleveland, Ohio, United States

Ohio State University

🇺🇸

Columbus, Ohio, United States

University of Pittsburgh

🇺🇸

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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