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Efficacy and Feasibility of Baby Triple P - a Pilot Study

Not Applicable
Conditions
Mental Disorders During Pregnancy
Interventions
Behavioral: Baby Triple P
Registration Number
NCT02313493
Lead Sponsor
Ruhr University of Bochum
Brief Summary

In the present pilot study the feasibility and efficacy of Baby Triple P- an antenatal parent training- are investigated. Healthy becoming first time parents were randomly allocated to either the Baby Triple P parent-training group or a care as usual control group. It is expected that 78 couples of becoming first time parents are recruited. It is hypothesized that parents and their infants in the parent training group will show significantly less psychopathology / regulation problems and better partnership quality than participants in the control condition.

Detailed Description

In this pilot study, the efficacy and feasibility of the Baby Triple P parenting training is investigated in a pilot study using a randomized controlled trial. According to the efficacy of the parenting training, it is expected that parents in the training condition show higher scores on mental health scales (BSI-18) and quality of Partnership (PFB). Furthermore, it is expected that infants whose parents has taken part in the parenting training have lower severity ratings of regulatory disorders assessed with the Baby-DIPS diagnostic interview than infants of parents in the care as usual control condition.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
78
Inclusion Criteria
  • Becoming first time parent
  • Participants have a basic level of German literacy which allows them to understand the Baby Triple P materials
  • Unborn Baby is developing well and does not have a pre-diagnosed medical condition
Exclusion Criteria
  • Baby has a disability or pre-diagnosed medical condition.
  • The parents are intellectually disabled

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Baby Triple P parent training groupBaby Triple PThe 8- session program delivered in four group sessions before birth and four telephone sessions after birth is developed for parents at the transition to parenthood or with a baby (up to 12 months of age).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of symptoms on the BSI 18 and the PFB-KBefore birth (T1), two months after birth (T2)

The BSI 18 assessment gathers patient-reported data to help measure psychological distress and psychiatric disorders. The relationship questionnaire (PFB-K) assess partnership satisfaction.

Severity rating (0-8) of regulatory problems in infantssix months after birth (T3)

Regulatory difficulties in crying, sleeping and feeding behavior in infants are assessed with a diagnostic interview (Baby-DIPS). The severity rating ranges from 0-8 (\> 4 indicates a clinical referred disorder).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Quality of parentingTwo months after birth (T2), six month after birth (T3)

Parent-related behavior and cognitions are assessed with the Parenting Sense of Competence Scale (PSOC; T2,T3) with both parents and the Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire (PBQ;T2) only with mothers. Additionally, explorative questionnaires assess program specific parenting skills and educational elements as the number of soothing strategies the parents apply or the knowledge about an infants' development (T2, T3).

Number of symptoms on the EPDS, DASS-21 and the OSS-3Two months after birth (T2)

The Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS, T2) is a rating scale for measuring the severity of postnatal depression symptoms. The Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21) assess symptoms of depressions, anxiety and stress. The Oslo Social Support Scale (OSS-3) measures the subjective amount of social support the parents get.

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