Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03341455

Family Violence and Alcohol and Drug Misuse in Sri Lanka

Developing, Implementing and Evaluating Preschool Based Interventions to Address Family Violence and Alcohol and Drug Misuse in Sri Lanka

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
900 (actual)
Sponsor
Australian National University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The investigators aim to implement a community-based support program delivered by preschool teachers and volunteer parents that will increase awareness, knowledge and uptake of available services for IPV and substance misuse, and of the link between these issues and poorer education outcomes in children. Through this, the aim is to decrease the prevalence of IPV and substance misuse. The proposed method of implementation is to deliver targeted training to preschool teachers, mothers with children at the preschools, fathers with children at the preschools, and community development officers managing preschools. This project will target the most vulnerable sections of the community and will provide a sustainable and feasible strategy for scale up of the intervention. By intervening through these preschools the investigators aim to identify and support high-risk families early enough to arrest the cycle of violence that results in children themselves becoming victims and perpetrators of such violence.

Detailed description

This project will be implemented as a cluster-randomised controlled trial (RCT) in preschools in 2 urban study areas. The unit of randomisation will be the preschool. The intervention is a preschool-based capacity-building and support intervention addressing family violence and alcohol and drug misuse. The study intervention will be delivered to preschool teachers, local government Community Development Department staff, other key government service providers, and selected mothers and fathers of children attending each preschool. Participants in data collection will be all teachers and parents of children in participating preschools. Half the preschools in the study areas, selected at random, will receive the intervention initially. Those that do not will act as time-concurrent controls. If the intervention is demonstrated as being effective at the end of the study, these control preschools will subsequently receive the intervention. This research will address important gaps in literature documented by other researchers by using multiple sources of data to assess the effectiveness of the intervention. Preschool communities have not previously been target populations when addressing domestic violence in Sri Lanka. Results will add to the evidence base for future interventions in Sri Lanka and have potential to contribute to national policy. Study activities are listed in brief below, and will be subsequently expounded upon in the following sections. 1. A baseline survey at project outset will include mothers and fathers of children utilising these preschools, and will be conducted at the beginning of semester 1 of the project. This survey will include a series of self-report questionnaires, measuring: prevalence of family violence, prevalence of alcohol and drug misuse, depression, child psychological wellbeing, and gender attitudes to establish any baseline differences in prevalence of these factors between intervention and control groups. 2. Selected mothers and fathers from half of the preschools (the intervention group), along with preschool teachers, community development officers, and other government service providers, will receive training associated with the intervention before the end of semester 1. 3. Post intervention surveys with parents will be conducted near the end of the school year (at least 6 months post intervention) in all preschools in both study areas (both intervention and non-intervention groups). 4. Qualitative interviews will also be carried out with key informants associated with the project who received the intervention including teachers, community members, community development staff and other government sector service providers to determine their satisfaction with the intervention, and any challenges or barriers to its implementation. 5. If the intervention is deemed to have been effective, the non-intervention preschools will then receive the training intervention in 2019.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCapacity building to support families affected by IPV & substance misuseTraining targeted groups (mothers, fathers, preschool teachers, community officers managing preschools) separately with the aim to identify and support high-risk families early enough to arrest the cycle of violence that results in children themselves becoming victims and perpetrators of such violence.

Timeline

Start date
2018-01-23
Primary completion
2018-12-30
Completion
2019-02-28
First posted
2017-11-14
Last updated
2019-07-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03341455. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.