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Translating Peer-to-Peer Support Into a Clinical Setting

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Development Delay
Autism
Interventions
Behavioral: Parents Taking Action
Registration Number
NCT04313283
Lead Sponsor
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Brief Summary

There is not a lot of research focusing on Black and African American families raising young children with developmental delays. While the investigators know that early intervention helps children and their families, Black children with developmental delays are less likely to access such services. The causes for these racial disparities are largely unknown. Researchers have recommended caregiver support programming while on waitlists to improve caregiver-provider interactions and caregiver knowledge of the diagnostic process and developmental delays. Once a child is referred to a clinic for developmental concerns, long appointment waitlists contribute to further delays in timely diagnosis and treatment, as well as parental distress. Support programs for waitlisted families can begin to address these challenges. In this study, the investigators will examine a program called Parents Taking Action with families on a waitlist for a specialty developmental evaluation. The investigators will study if the program is feasible in this setting, if participants like the program, and if child and parent outcomes improve after participants have completed the program.

Detailed Description

Partners at the University of Maryland Baltimore (UMB) School of Medicine (SOM), School of Social Work (SSW), and community collaborators will pilot an intervention focused on Black and African-American children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (hereafter, autism) and other developmental delays. The research fills several gaps in the academic literature. First, there is a dearth of intervention research focusing on Black families raising young children with autism. Early intervention significantly improves child and family outcomes across childhood and into adulthood. Yet, Black children with autism are less likely to access such services. Even when controlling for socioeconomic status, racial disparities in autism and developmental disability diagnoses and services persist. The causes for these socioeconomic and racial disparities are largely unknown. Researchers have recommended caregiver support programming while on waitlists to improve caregiver-provider interactions and caregiver knowledge of the diagnostic process; yet, such interventions have not been described in the literature.

SSW researchers led a community-based trial to adapt a peer-led intervention, Parents Taking Action, for low-income Black families raising children with autism in Baltimore. The psychoeducational and child behavior management intervention, led by trained Parent Leaders, is unique in that it considers families' cultural and socioeconomic characteristics. Our social work team worked closely with our community advisory board to make cultural adaptations to the manual for use in Baltimore with a majority Black population. Our social work team has since further adapted the program to deliver content in two six-week modules (12 weeks total).

Despite the social work team's efforts to understand and address racial autism disparities, a wholly community-based model has limitations. Once a child is referred to a clinic for developmental concerns, long appointment waitlists contribute to further delays in timely diagnosis and treatment, as well as parental distress. Wait times also contribute to appointment absenteeism, which further delays timely access to care. A study suggested support programs for waitlisted families can begin to address these challenges. In total, these studies have suggested an integrated community-clinical model can provide critical supports to children and their families while on a waitlist and strengthen connections between families and clinical providers. Thus, this project will test the feasibility, acceptability, and short-term outcomes of a peer-led program, Parents Taking Action with a clinical sample.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
36
Inclusion Criteria
  • Parent or other primary caregiver of a child age eight years or younger on University of Maryland Baltimore, Developmental-Behavioral waiting list for autism or developmental concerns
  • Identify self or child as Black or African American.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Parent or other primary caregiver is younger than 18 years old

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Parents Taking ActionParents Taking ActionA peer-led intervention, Parents Taking Action is the psychoeducational and child behavior management intervention led by trained Parent Leaders for 12 weeks.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Parenting StressPre-intervention and post-intervention at 12 weeks

Autism Parenting Stress Index (APSI): This measure includes 13 items that assess core autism symptoms, comorbid behaviors, and comorbid physical behaviors. Each item is based on a 5-point rating scale with descriptors for 0, 1, 2, 3, and 5. Possible range is 0-65. Higher scores indicate more parenting stress.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Family FunctioningPre-intervention and post-intervention at 12 weeks

Family Outcomes Survey-Revised (FOS-R): This measure was developed to provide child and family outcomes for evaluation the effectiveness of early intervention program. This measure includes 24 items assessing five outcomes (1) family needs/strengths (4 items); (2) advocacy (5 items); (3) child learning support (4 items); (4) social support (5 items); and (5) community access (6 items). Each item is based on a 5-point rating scale with descriptors for 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. Possible range is 24-120. Higher scores indicate better family functioning.

Child BehaviorPre-intervention and post-intervention at 12 weeks

Nisonger Child Behavior Rating Form (NCBRF)- This measure includes 76 item in two sections, reported separately: positive social behavior and problem behavior. Each item is based on a 4-point rating scale with descriptors for 0, 1, 2, and 3.

Section 1 (positive social behavior) contains 10 items and scores range from 0-30. Higher scores indicate more positive social behavior.

Section 2 (problem behavior) contains 66 items and scores range from 0-198. Higher scores indicate more child behavior problems.

DepressionPre-intervention and post-intervention at 12 weeks

Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression (CES-D)- This measure contains 20 items assess 4 separate factors: depressive affect, somatic symptoms, positive affect, and interpersonal relations. Each item is based on a 4-point rating scale with descriptors for 0, 1, 2, and 3. Possible range is 0-60. A score of 16 points or more considered depressed.

FidelityWeekly through intervention (12 weeks total)

Procedural Fidelity Checklist Self-Assessment for Promotora Home Visits: This measurement was developed to evaluate Parent Leaders' fidelity on the program delivery. This measure includes 16 items the Parent Leader completes after every program session. Each item is based on two responses: (1) I did this; (2) I did not this. Possible range is 0-100. Higher scores indicate less fidelity.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Maryland

🇺🇸

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

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