Mobile Health (mHealth) Tools to Improve Delivery Quality of a Family Home Visiting Intervention
- Conditions
- Child DevelopmentmHealthBehavioral InterventionImplementation ScienceCommunity Health WorkersMental HealthParent-Child RelationsExposure to Violent Event
- Interventions
- Other: Community Health Worker RoutineBehavioral: Family Strengthening Intervention for Early Childhood Development
- Registration Number
- NCT04481399
- Lead Sponsor
- Boston College
- Brief Summary
This study will pilot a family-focused, behavioral health intervention while also developing and piloting mHealth tools to support Community Health Workers (CHWs) in Sierra Leone. This dual focus will help build capacity both for delivery of evidence-based mental health services to reduce family violence and harsh parenting practices, and for effective use of mHealth strategies to improve healthcare delivery quality. This study will leverage Government of Sierra Leone investments in community health initiatives as a strategy to address critical healthcare workforce limitations that plague delivery of evidence-based interventions to vulnerable families in post-conflict Sierra Leone. Study aims are to:
Aim 1. Employ a five-phase user-centered design approach to develop and test mHealth tools to improve training, supervision, and fidelity monitoring of Community Health Workers. Study investigators hypothesize that mHealth tools will be feasible, acceptable, and user-friendly.
Aim 2. Conduct a Randomized Controlled Pilot Study to assess feasibility, acceptability, costs and preliminary effects of the mHealth-supported delivery of FSI-ECD on parent mental health, emotion regulation, and familial violence in high risk families with children aged 6-36 months (n=40) in comparison to control families (n=40) who receive standard care. Parental mental health, emotion regulation, household violence, and parenting practices will be assessed at baseline, post-intervention and 6-month follow-up. Study investigators hypothesize that (a) the effects of the FSI-ECD will be comparable to results observed with vulnerable families in Rwanda; (b) digital tools will be feasible and acceptable to CHWs and supervisors.
Aim 3. Leverage well-established relationships and government partners to strengthen capacity for mHealth research and quality healthcare delivery in Sierra Leone. Partners include the University of Makeni, the Directorate of Science, Technology and Innovation, and the Ministry of Health and Sanitation.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 180
- Focus Group-User Interface/User Experience (UI/UX) Participants: Aged 18 or older; ability to attend 1-2 sessions (90 minutes per session)
- Family Participants: Families who are (a) a Sierra Leonean household with cohabitating caregivers (e.g., father/mother, mother/grandmother, mother/intimate partner), and child (aged 6-36 months) with both parents aged 18 or older and; (b) one parent scoring at least 62.5 on the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS). The DERS cut-off score has been used successfully as a risk assessment screening tool in our prior and ongoing studies in Sierra Leone. Sierra Leonean caregivers scoring above this threshold on the DERS have reported significantly higher levels of severe physical punishment with their children as well as intimate partner violence. Both parents must agree to attend FSI-ECD sessions. If enrolled families have more than one child aged 6-36 months, we will include all eligible children as study participants.
- Community Health Worker Participants: CHWs who are 18 years or older and who are assigned to the Peripheral Health Unit that provides health services in one of our target communities.
- Community Health Worker Supervisor Participants: Supervisors are 18 years or older and oversee CHWs providing maternal and child health services
- Focus Group-User Interface/User Experience (UI/UX) Participants: Individuals younger than age 18 and individuals who do not meet inclusion criteria.
- Family Participants: Families who do not meet all inclusion criteria and/or who are experiencing active family crises (e.g., current suicidality or psychosis, cognitive impairment, ongoing divorce process).
- Community Health Worker Participants: Individuals under age 18 cannot be recruited to work as a CHW.
- Community Health Worker Supervisor Participants: Individuals under age 18.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Control Community Health Worker Routine The control is standard maternal and child health home visiting delivered by community health workers. Families will receive three 90-minute home visiting educational sessions focused on nutrition, hygiene, and post-natal care. FSI-ECD Family Strengthening Intervention for Early Childhood Development The Family Strengthening Intervention for Early Childhood Development (FSI-ECD) is an evidence-based home-visiting behavioral intervention for vulnerable families with children aged 6-36 months. The FSI-ECD targets improving parental emotion regulation and parent-child interactions to improve parental mental health and child development outcomes and reduce family violence. The FSI-ECD will be delivered in weekly 90-minute home visiting sessions for 12 consecutive weeks.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Acceptability as assessed through the John Hopkins Implementation and Dissemination Science Scale Immediately after the intervention Acceptability of mHealth tool implementation to support FSI-ECD delivery will be assessed via a Dissemination and Implementation measures developed by the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health. This is a 10-item self-report measure and items are scored on a 4-point Likert scale: 1=not at all, 2=a little bit, 3=a moderate amount, 4=a lot.
Feasibility as assessed through the John Hopkins Implementation and Dissemination Science Scale Immediately after the intervention Feasibility of mHealth tool implementation to support FSI-ECD delivery will be assessed via a Dissemination and Implementation measures developed by the John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health. This is a 20-item self-report measure and items are scored on a 4-point Likert scale: 1=not at all, 2=a little bit, 3=a moderate amount, 4=a lot.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Observation of Mother-Child Interaction (OMCI) Baseline, immediately after the intervention, and 3-months after the intervention The Observation of Mother-Child Interaction (OMCI) is a direct observational measure used to assess mother-child interaction during a shared picture-book reading activity that includes maternal (10 items) and child assessments (5 items). Maternal responsive behaviors include contingent responding, emotional-affective support, support for infant foci of attention, and language inputs. Child behaviors include the child's behavioral and social-emotional reactions during the observation. Each item is rated on a 4-point scale: 0 = Never, 1 = Very few, 2 = Sometimes (3-4 times), and 3 = Five or more times. Total scores are assigned for the mother's reaction, the child's reaction, and mother-child interaction, respectively.
Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) Baseline, immediately after the intervention, and 3-months after the intervention The Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) is a 43-item measure that assesses the level of stimulation and support provided by caregivers in the home. All items receive a binary score based on the presence (score = 1) or absence (score = 0) of self-reported and direct observation of parenting behaviors and household conditions. Item scores are summed to derive scores on a total scale and the 6 subscales, i.e., variety, organization, acceptance, involvement, learning materials, and responsivity.
Conflict Tactics Scale-2 (CTS-2) Baseline, immediately after the intervention, and 3-months after the intervention The Conflict Tactics Scale (CTS-2) is a 78-item scale (39 behaviors or experiences, each asked once for respondent and one for partner). The CTS is comprised of 5 subscales, i.e., negotiation, psychological aggression, physical assault, injury, and sexual coercion. The response categories gauge the frequency with which acts were used during conflict with a partner in the past year using a 6-point scale ranging from "never" to "20 or more times." There are also response options of "Never in the last year, but it did happen before that," and "This has never happened."
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Civilian Checklist Baseline, immediately after the intervention and 3-months after the intervention The Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Civilian Checklist is a 17-item scale that assesses symptoms of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder. Items are rated on a binary scale of "yes" or "no" responses.
Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS) Baseline, immediately after the intervention, and 3-months after the intervention The Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS) is a 36-item measure that assesses emotion dysregulation across 6 domains, i.e., non-acceptance of emotional responses, difficulty engaging in goal-directed behavior, impulse control difficulties, lack of emotional awareness, limited access to emotion regulation strategies, and lack of emotional clarity. The DERS is scored on a 5-point Likert scale: 1=Almost Never, 2=Sometimes, 3=About half the time, 4=Most of the time, 5=Almost always. Higher scores indicate greater difficulties in emotion regulation.
Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL) Baseline, immediately after the intervention and 3-months after the intervention The Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL) is a 25-item inventory that measures symptoms of anxiety and depression. Part I of the measure has 10 items assessing anxiety symptoms and Part II has 15 items assessing depression symptoms. Each item is rated on a 4-point scale: 1 = Not at all, 2 = A little, 3 = Quite a bit, and 4 = Extremely. Item scores are summed to derive scores for the total scale and subscales, i.e., anxiety and depression.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Makeni
🇸🇱Makeni, Sierra Leone