Mindful Parenting for Parents With SEN Adolescents
- Conditions
- Well-Being, PsychologicalStressExpressed Emotion
- Interventions
- Behavioral: 8-week mindful parenting program
- Registration Number
- NCT06522243
- Lead Sponsor
- The University of Hong Kong
- Brief Summary
The goal of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of an online eight-week mindful parenting program for parents of adolescents with special needs and its impact on parents' wellbeing and behaviors of their adolescents with SEN(s).
Researchers will randomize the participants into the immediate intervention group (to start the intervention soon after recruitment) and the waitlist control group (to start the intervention after the immediate intervention group) so as to compare the changes between the two groups.
The participants will join the 8-week mindful parenting intervention and one follow-up session. They will be asked to fill in the questionnaires at baseline, after the 8-week intervention, and at the follow-up sessions. Training sessions will be audio-taped and transcripted. The conversation during the zoom classes and participants' sharing on their subjective experience related to mindfulness practices will be analysed.
- Detailed Description
Being a parent is inherently a demanding and stressful job, and raising children with SEN may pose additional stressors to parents. Parents of SEN children have higher parenting stress compared to those of typically developed children in facing daily challenges with their children's learning and development, which may lead to a higher risk of child maltreatment. Adolescence and emerging adulthood are a transition period which may impose increased stress and challenges on both young people and their parents. As a result, parents of young people with SEN(s) require more support in both parenting skills and their own psychological wellbeing.
Parents not only provide care for their children but also create an everyday environment under which their children are raised. Improvements in parenting skills and parents' mental health could lead to positive outcomes for child and youth mental wellbeing (while malfunctioning parenting may also impose an aversive effect on children's development. For instance, a critical and over-involvement of parental-child interaction, i.e., high expressed emotion (high EE) in the family, was found to be a robust predictor of relapse in different psychiatric illnesses.
Parenting is by nature a highly challenging and complex job and raising a child with mental illness could be even more stressful and strain parents' experience. It was reported that the severity of children's emotional and behavioral disturbances was closely related to parents' stress levels. On the other hand, parenting stress is an essential factor contributing to parenting effectiveness. When parents experience a high level of stress, their parenting effectiveness may decrease. Hence, reducing parents' stress levels would not only benefit parents themselves but also enhance effective parenting so as to benefit the wellbeing of their children with mental illness.
Mindful parenting Mindful parenting has been defined as the ability to pay attention to your children and parenting in an intentional, non-judgmental, and moment-to-moment awareness. Mindful parenting intervention does not directly teach parenting skills like other parenting training programs. Being mindful in everyday parenting is to perceive their children with an unbiased and open attitude, providing more sensible and responsive reactions to the children instead of reacting automatically based on past experience of parenting or being parented. By decentering from the current thoughts or affects, it enables parents to observe their internal experiences objectively without overidentifying with them. This, in turn, strengthens their capacity to endure the intense emotions and allow them to be more fully present with their child. Mindful parenting was also found to be negatively correlated with parental stress, yet positively associated with the levels of adopting authoritative parenting style. Furthermore, one of the features of the mindful parenting program is to practice non-judgmental awareness when interacting with children instead of automatically reacting to children's behaviours. It is thus speculated that mindful parenting practice could also promote less high EE interactions between parents and adolescents, which has been sparsely studied in the existing literature. The current pilot study may thus provide a possible mechanism in explaining the effectiveness of mindful parenting in improving the wellbeing of both parents and their children with SEN(s).
Mindful parenting had been applied in parenting for children with special needs, childbirth and parenting, and parenting for children with mental illness. The results of various mindful parenting programs (with a minimum of 6-8 weekly group sessions) showed some evidence of improvements for parenting stress, parents' psychopathology, and their children's mental health symptoms. However, the study sample had mainly focused on parents whose children were in their early or middle childhood.
The current study thus aims to recruit a more diverse sample of adolescents with different types of SENs. The data and experience gained from the current pilot study would also shed light on a clearer picture of whether a nine-session mindful parenting program would benefit both parents and their adolescent children with SENs.
A mixed methods design with qualitative journaling and quantitative experimental design could leverage the benefits of both methods. The data collected from participants' journal writing would elucidate the benefits, challenges, and personal growth through mindfulness practices from a subjective experiential perspective. It will also provide valuable insights for designing a larger-scale study to understand the underlying mechanism of mindful parenting on wellbeing of both parents and their children with SEN.
Aims and Hypotheses to be Tested:
The current study aims to (i) to evaluate the effectiveness of mindfulness training in enhancing the wellbeing of both parents and behaviors of their adolescents with SEN(s); (ii) to assess the feasibility and acceptability of adopting a nine-session Mindful Parenting program among parents of adolescents with SEN(s); (iii) to formulate useful suggestions and guidelines on mindfulness training for parents of adolescents with SEN(s).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 120
- with one adolescent child with special educational need(s)
- being the major caregiver for the adolescent for at least one year
- Cantonese speaker
- schizophrenia-spectrum disorder
- bipolar disorder
- substance abuse
- developmental disabilities
- with active psychotic symptoms
- high suicidal risks
- experiencing a recent personal crisis
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description immediate intervention 8-week mindful parenting program Start with the 8-week intervention immediately/soon after recruitment
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Wellbeing Literacy 16 weeks Wellbeing literacy measured using the Well-being Literacy Scale to assess the participants' capability to comprehend and communicate wellbeing. A total score was calculated to indicate level of wellbeing language use, with a higher score implying better outcome (minimum value=6; maximum value = 42).
Emotional Disturbances 16 weeks Emotional disturbances was measured using Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale - 21 items (DASS-21) is a set of three self-report scales designed to measure the emotional states of depression, anxiety, and stress. A total score is adopted to indicate the level of emotional disturbances with a higher score implying a worse outcome (minimum value =0; maximum value = 63).
Parents' Expressed Emotion 16 weeks Family Questionnaire (FQ) is used to evaluate the parents' level of expressed emotion, including criticism and over-involvement. FQ is a 20-item parent self-rated questionnaire with four possible answers ranging from "never/very rarely" to "very often." A total score will be calculated with a higher score indicating a a higher level of expressed emotion (minimum value=20; maximum value=80).
Mindfulness in Parenting 16 weeks The 31-item Chinese version of the Interpersonal Mindfulness in Parenting Scale (IM-P) will be used to evaluate parents' mindfulness on four aspects, including compassion for the child, nonjudgmental acceptance in parenting, emotional awareness, and listening with full attention. A total sum will be calculated to indicate mindfulness in parenting with a higher score implying better outcome (minimum value=31; maximum value=155).
Children's behaviors 16 weeks The 25-item Chinese version of the Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) will be used to assess the externalising and internalising problems of adolescents. It comprises five subscales, ranging from emotional problems, conduct problems, hyperactivity, peer problems and prosocial behaviours in adolescents. Each item is rated on a Likert scale from 0 (not true) to 2 (certainly true). A total difficulties score will be calculated with a higher score implying more difficult behaviors by summing scores from all the items except the prosocial scale (minimum value=0; maximum value=40).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method General Mindfulness Awareness 16 weeks To assess the general mindfulness awareness in parents, the short 15-item version of the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ-15) will be used. A total sum will be calculated to indicate trait mindfulness with a higher score implying better outcome (minimum value=15; maximum value=75).
Decentering 16 weeks Decentering is measured using the Experiences Questionnaire, an 11-item self-report scale that assesses the construct of decentering or disidentification with content of negative thinking. A total sum will be calculated to indicate level of decentering with a higher score implying better outcome (minimum value=5; maximum value=55).
Parenting Skills 16 weeks Alabama Parenting Questionnaire-short version is a 9-item self-rated questionnaire used to measures three factors in parenting: positive parenting, inconsistent discipline and poor supervision. Items are scored from 1 (never) to 5 (always). A higher score in subscale of positive parenting (minimum value=3; maximum value=15) indicates a better outcome while a higher score in subscales of inconsistent discipline and poor supervision (minimum value=3; maximum value=15) indicate worse outcomes.