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UnknownNCT04654533

Promoting Sensitivity in Center-based Childcare

SEnsitive Care: Understanding and REsponding - Promoting Sensitivity in Center-based Childcare of 0-2 Year Old Children (the SECURE Project)

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
110 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Copenhagen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of an attachment research-informed intervention adapted to the Danish childcare context in terms of improving process quality in center-based childcare for 0-2 years old children. Specifically, the aim is to improve caregiver interactive skills and mind-mindedness. The intervention is delivered in groups during eight weekly sessions and is based on the manualized Circle of Security Parenting model, but adapted to the childcare context: The Circle of Security Classroom model. Intake is planned to be completed in January 2023 and 110 childcare providers are estimated to be enrolled in the trial.

Detailed description

Background: It is well-established that children's early attachment relationship experiences with their primary caregivers play an important role in psycho-social development. However, it has been shown that also the child's relationship with other important caregivers, such as early professional caregivers in childcare, is important for socioemotional and academic development. In particular, if a child grows up in an at-risk context the quality of early childcare is pivotal for long-term development. Children with an insecure attachment to their parents are at heightened risk for developing insecure attachments to professional caregivers. However, caregiver interactive skills are found to be associated with children's attachment security to professional caregivers, irrespective of the child's attachment relationship to the primary caregiver. Therefore, professional caregivers' ability to establish optimal interactions with the children in their care provides an important target of intervention in terms of promoting healthy child development. In a randomized waitlist control trial, this study aims to 1. investigate the efficacy of COS-C in enhancing caregivers' interactive skills when interacting with groups of children in a natural busy real-life setting, their mind-mindedness (MM), and their work-specific resources to cope with stress. 2. investigate if changes in the caregivers' mind-mindedness is related to changes in their interactive skills. 3. explore if effects of the COS-C are moderated by personal and structural factors, here operationalized as the caregivers' own attachment style and staff stability. 4. evaluate the implementation of the COS-C by examining childcare providers' experience of the intervention's acceptability and feasibility, and we will examine the degree to acceptability and feasibility are related to the intervention's effectiveness. Investigating feasibility and acceptability of the COS-C intervention is essential in terms of evaluating the potential for up-scaling and further implementation of the intervention in Denmark 5. employing a qualitative approach we investigate a) how the caregivers and their managers make sense of changes caused by the intervention and b) how the caregivers experience the intervention in terms of its feasibility and acceptability when implemented in their daily practice. Methods: Childcare centers are recruited from a Danish municipality with a high proportion of at-risk families. Teams of 2-5 caregivers working in Danish childcare centers with children aged 0-2 years are allocated to either COS-C (eight weekly two-hour sessions) or a waitlist. A total of 110 caregivers are estimated to be enrolled, and the intervention will be delivered in groups of 6-10 caregivers. To facilitate implementation, the managers of the participating childcare providers are invited to participate in the intervention. Effects of COS-C are measured using observations of video-recorded caregiver-child interaction (coded for six key interactive skills: Sensitive responsiveness, Respect for autonomy, structuring and limit setting, Verbal communication, Developmental stimulation, and Fostering positive peer interactions) and Mind-Mindedness (representational and interactional Mind-Mindedness) is measured via coding of transcribed interviews and video-recorded caregiver-child interactions. Structural and caregiver attachment style are measured using observation and questionnaires answered by caregivers and managers. Feasibility and acceptability of the intervention are evaluated using questionnaires and via qualitative interviews. Perspectives: The project will provide new knowledge on whether a relatively cost-effective intervention can improve the quality of care in Danish childcare centers for young children. Also, findings on how structural factors influence the quality of care will directly inform practice.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCOSCCOSC is professional development program for early childcare providers adapted from the Circle of Security-Parenting (COSP) model. It is a manualized intervention that leverages research on attachment relationships combining psycho-education with a mentalization-based approach. The model uses pre-produced video vignettes of secure and problematic caregiver-child interactions to illustrate how caregivers' may struggle in meeting children's' attachment needs. Participants are invited to reflect on how they meet and perhaps still not meet the needs of the children in their care with a particular focus on the challenging or 'difficult' children. The COSP manual has been translated into Danish (Cooper, Hoffman and Powel, 2020, translated by Pedersen, Kronendorf von Wowern, Lier, \& Smith-Nielsen), and the additional COSC material has been translated into Danish for the purpose of this study.

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-19
Primary completion
2023-01-01
Completion
2023-06-01
First posted
2020-12-04
Last updated
2022-01-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04654533. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.