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Improving Satisfaction, Engagement and Outcomes Among Traditionally Underserved Children Through Cultural Formulation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Disruptive Behavior
Interventions
Behavioral: Clinical Assessment and CFI
Behavioral: Clinical Assessment
Registration Number
NCT03499600
Lead Sponsor
Florida International University
Brief Summary

The project at the center of this proposal will leverage a pilot randomized design to examine initial feasibility and preliminary effects of augmenting usual mental health evaluation procedures with a structured person-centered assessment tool that specifically considers the cultural context of patient mental health problems (i.e., the Cultural Formulation Interview; CFI) on parent satisfaction, engagement and clinical child outcomes in the treatment of early child behavior problems. Additional analyses will explore whether traditional barriers (e.g., stigma, ethnic identity, and daily stress) moderate the effects of the CFI on satisfaction, engagement and treatment outcomes.

Detailed Description

This project is leveraging a pilot randomized design to evaluate initial feasibility and preliminarily examine whether augmenting assessment procedures for child behavior problems with the CFI improves satisfaction with assessment procedures and treatment, parent engagement in subsequent behavior parent training, and ultimately clinical child outcomes. Exploratory analyses will further consider whether traditional barriers to care moderate outcomes. The study is being conducted within a large South Florida mental health network serving predominately low-income minority families obtaining parent training for early child behavior problems. Participating families will be randomized at baseline to receive either the standard diagnostic and clinical assessment (CA) or CA+CFI.

Specifically, the investigators are interested in assessing study feasibility. Feasibility of recruitment and randomization, study retention, and condition integrity will be monitored. Additionally, clinician reports of CFI feasibility, acceptability and clinical utility will be examined. An additional main outcome will be initial satisfaction directly after the interview. It is hypothesized that families in the CA+CFI group will report higher levels of initial satisfaction than the CA group. A secondary goal is to assess preliminary effects of administering the CFI on treatment satisfaction, engagement and clinical child outcomes. Parents and therapists will report on their satisfaction with treatment. Engagement outcomes will be measured via: (a) initial session attendance, (b) drop out rate (c) session attendance rate, (d) homework completion rate, and (e) therapeutic alliance. Clinical outcomes will be measured via parent ratings of child behavior problems and parent time to skill mastery. It is hypothesized that CA+CFI families will demonstrate improved satisfaction, engagement and clinical outcomes relative to CA families. Further exploratory analyses will examine individual differences in effects related to traditional barriers to care. Exploratory analyses will examine stigma, ethnic identity, and daily stress as moderators of the effects of CFI administration on satisfaction, engagement and clinical outcomes. It is hypothesized that CFI effects will be particularly strong for families who experience greater traditional barriers to care.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
89
Inclusion Criteria
  • Child with elevated behavior problems
  • Child is between ages 2-7 years (inclusive)
  • Family seeking services at one of the University of Miami PCIT-Community Connect Centers
Exclusion Criteria
  • Parent is actively abusing illegal substances
  • Child is younger than 2 years of age
  • Child is older than 7 years of age

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Clinical Assessment and CFIClinical Assessment and CFICA and CFI families will receive the Cultural Formulation Interview prior to their standard Clinical Assessment during their intake.
Clinical Assessment OnlyClinical AssessmentCA families will receive a standard Clinical Assessment during intake.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
CFI Fidelity InstrumentPost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The CFI Fidelity Instrument assesses fidelity to the CFI (i.e. adherence and competence) in the CA+CFI group and potential cross-condition contamination in CA condition. Independent evaluators masked to condition, study design, and study hypotheses coded recordings of all assessments.

This analysis was utilized to assess for feasibility of the pilot study and was mistakenly entered into the system as a primary outcome variable. This measure is not used to determine the effect of an experimental variable on participants in the study. Statistical analyses for this measure were only descriptive.

Satisfaction With Intake QuestionnairePost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The Satisfaction with Intake Questionnaire is a 7-item measure developed for use in the current study to assess parent and clinician satisfaction with their intake assessment. This measure assesses how well the patient/clinician felt the clinician understood the family's problems, cultural background, how their culture may influence their problem, and how much the parent trusts the clinician. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert style scale ranging from 1='not at all' to 5='very much', with higher scores representing higher satisfaction. Each item has a minimum of 1 and maximum of 5. Items were not summed.

Two items were analyzed separately for the main outcomes: linear regressions tested condition effects on caregiver and provider satisfaction, and the extent to which the provider understood the caregivers' values or what is important to them.

CFI Clinician QuestionnairePost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The CFI Clinician Questionnaire is a 4-item measure developed designed to assess clinical utility of the CFI. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert style scale ranging from 1='not at all' to 5='very much'. Each item has a minimum score of 1 and a max of 5. Items include the extent to which conducting the CFI influences content and quality of information obtained in the intake, realtionship with the caregiver, treatment planning, and differential diagnosis. Higher scores indicate higher levels of clinical utility of the CFI. The measure was given only to the CA + CFI condition.

This analysis was utilized to assess for initial utility of the CFI and was mistakenly entered into the system as a primary outcome variable. This measure is not used to determine the effect of an experimental variable on participants in the study. Statistical analyses for this measure were descriptive and only examined for the experimental group.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Therapy Attitudes InventoryPost Treatment (anticipated average: Week 14)

The Therapy Attitudes Inventory (TAI; Brestan et al., 2000) is a 10-item parent-report of satisfaction with treatment including change in child behavior problems and parenting skills on a likert style scale from 1="nothing"-5="very many useful techniques". Items are summed to create a total score. Minimum value is 10 and maximum value is 50. Higher scores represent higher satisfaction with treatment.

Working Alliance Inventory-Short Form RevisedPost Treatment (Anticipated average: Week 14)

The WAI-Short Form Revised (WAI-SR; Hatcher \& Gillaspy, 2006) is a 12-item clinician- and patient-report measure of therapeutic alliance that assesses (a) agreement on the tasks of therapy, (b) agreement on the goals of therapy and (c) development of an affective bond. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert style scale ranging from 1='never' to 5='always'. Scores on each sub scale are summed to create a total score. Total scores range from 12-60 with higher scores representing higher therapeutic alliance.

EngagementChange from Baseline (Week 0) through post treatment

Engagement will be measured for each family via: (a) dichotomous coding of initial session attendance (yes=1, no=0), (b) dichotomous coding of whether they completed the first treatment module (yes=1, no=0), (c) attendance rate (number of sessions attended over number of weeks in treatment), and (d) mean weekly homework completion across treatment (Homework Compliance)

Parental Attitudes Toward Psychological Services InventoryPost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

Two subscales of the Parental Attitudes Toward Psychological Services Inventory (PATPSI; Turner, 2012) will be administered: help seeking attitudes scale (8 items) and the stigmatization scale (8 items) comprising 16 items total. The PATPSI assesses caregivers' attitudes toward outpatient mental health services. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert-style scale from 0='strongly disagree' to 5='strongly agree'.

Item responses are summed to form a stigma total scale (minimum value=0 and maximum value=40) and a help seeking total scale (minimum value=0 and maximum value=40) with higher scores representing more mental health related stigma and more positive attitudes toward mental health services.

This is a single time point assessment and is therefore not an outcome variable. There was an error when registering in clinical trials.

Everyday Discrimination ScalePost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The Everyday Discrimination Scale (EDS; Williams et al., 1997) is a 9-item measure that assesses aspects of interpersonal discrimination or unfair treatment in their day-to-day life. Items are rated on a Likert-style scale ranging from 0='never' to 5='almost every day', with higher scores indicating more experiences of discrimination. The minimum score is 0 and maximum score is 45. Scores were averaged to create a mean discrimination score which could range from 0 to 5.

This is a single time point assessment and is therefore not an outcome variable. There was an error when registering in clinical trials.

Treatment ResponseChange from Baseline (Week 0) through post treatment (anticipated average: Week 14)

Treatment response reflected traditional PCIT graduation criteria: caregiver skill acquisition as coded against specific criteria in both phases of treatment; and (b) child behavior problems dropped into the subclinical range.

Families were classified as Treatment Responders in accordance with formal PCIT graduation criteria, that is: (a) caregivers demonstrated skill acquisition, as coded against specific criteria in both phases of treatment; and (b) child behavior problems dropped into the subclinical range - i.e., Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI) falls below 114).

Participants were coded as either treatment responders=1, or treatment non-responders=0.

Everyday Stressors IndexPost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The Everyday Stressors Index (ESI Hall, 1983) is a 20-item measure that assesses daily stressors experienced by economically disadvantaged parents with young children. Items are rated on a Likert-style scale ranging from 1='not at bothered' to 4='bothered a great deal' with higher scores indicating higher levels of stress. The minimum value=20, and maximum value=80

This is a single time point assessment and is therefore not an outcome variable. There was an error when registering in clinical trials.

Eyberg Child Behavior InventoryChange from Baseline (Week 0) through post treatment (anticipated average: Week 14)

The Eyberg Child Behavior Inventory (ECBI; Eyberg \& Pincus, 1999) is a 36-item parent-report measure of disruptive behavior problems in children as young as 2 years that has shown strong psychometrics. The intensity score is summed to form a total score and ranges from 36 to 252 with higher numbers representing more severe behavior problems.

The difference in ECBI score between baseline and treatment completion was measured.

Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure- RevisedPost Intake Assessment (Week 0)

The Multigroup Ethnic Identity Measure- Revised (MEIM-R; Phinney \& Ong, 2007) is a 6-item measure that assesses exploration of and commitment to one's ethnic group. Items are rated on a 5-point Likert-style scale from 1='strongly disagree' to 6='strongly agree', with higher scores indicating stronger ethnic identity.

This is a single time point assessment and is therefore not an outcome variable. There was an error when registering in clinical trials.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Miami Mailman Center

🇺🇸

Miami, Florida, United States

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