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RecruitingNCT05214859

Enhancing Mother-Child Ties and Psychosocial Wellness Through Arts Among Children With Intellectual Disability and Their Mothers

Enhancing Mother-Child Ties and Psychosocial Wellness Through Arts: A Mixed Methods Study on Dyadic Expressive Arts-based Intervention for Children With Intellectual Disability and Their Mothers

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
154 (estimated)
Sponsor
The University of Hong Kong · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The caregiving of children with intellectual disability (ID) is intensive and challenging. Caregivers, particularly mothers, are left in a vulnerable and stressful condition. Children with ID may experience difficulties in expressing emotions and may have behavioral or emotional problems. These difficulties impose extra challenges for the parents to understand and interact with their children with ID. Existing intervention programs for families having children with ID primarily focus on problem-and-emotion-focused measures. While strategies focusing on improving parent-child relationships, mother-child communication, and wellness of the dyads are limited. Expressive arts-based intervention (EXAT) adopts multiple art modalities for achieving therapeutic goals. It can bypass verbal expression and complicated cognitive processing during interactions, and it is also safe, engaging, enjoyable, and empowering. While existing evidence supports the use of arts-based intervention on children and their parents, there is a limited understanding of the application of dyadic EXAT on the mother-child relationship and their wellness. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the dyadic Expressive Arts-based Intervention (EXAT) on the psychosocial well-being of mother-child dyads. Primary outcomes include parent-child relationship, parenting stress, and caregiver burnout; secondary outcomes include mother's affect and quality of life; child's mood, emotional expression, behavioral and emotional problems. This study adopts a mixed-methods design with quantitative, qualitative, and art-based assessment methods. This study is a randomized controlled trial, running for 3 years for evaluating the effectiveness of the dyadic Expressive Arts-based Intervention (EXAT). 154 Chinese mother-child dyads will be randomized into (i) a dyadic EXAT group or (ii) a treatment-as-usual waitlist control group. Quantitative analysis will be adopted to investigate the effectiveness of the dyadic intervention on the psychosocial outcomes of children with ID and their caregiving mothers. The qualitative component will consist of longitudinal in-depth interviews with mothers to understand the experiences, perceived changes, and factors that facilitate the process. Art-based assessment will also be used to understand the changes in the emotional expression of children with ID. Data collected will be triangulated to provide an integrative evaluation of the effectiveness of the intervention.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALThe Dyadic Expressive Arts Group TherapyThis therapy utilizes different art modalities, such as visual art, music, movement, dance, drama, and writing, as therapeutic means. With multiple sensory stimulations from different art forms, the therapy facilitates communication, expression, perception, and interactions. The therapy consists of 8 weekly 90 minutes sessions, with 3-4 mother-child dyads in each therapy group. Each session will follow the basic structure of Expressive Arts Therapy, including check-in, warm-up, core art-making, sharing, and closure. The following themes related to the mother-child relationship will be included, such as communication, relationship, expression, empathy, interaction, love, gratitude, and connection.

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-09
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2022-01-31
Last updated
2025-05-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Hong Kong

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05214859. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Enhancing Mother-Child Ties and Psychosocial Wellness Through Arts Among Children With Intellectual Disability and Their (NCT05214859) · Clinical Trials Directory