Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05280613

The Family Check-Up in Autism Services

The Family Check-Up: Implementing a New Family-Centred Model Within Autism Services

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
82 (actual)
Sponsor
McMaster University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Many children and youth with autism spectrum disorder have high levels of emotional and behavioural problems. Parents play a powerful role in supporting their children's well-being. Research also shows that certain factors (e.g., parent mental health, access to services) can affect autistic children's well-being in important ways. Despite this, autism services rarely ask about, or act upon, the factors that we know affect child and family well-being. We are addressing this problem by testing a program called the Family Check-Up within a large autism service. The Family Check-Up is a strengths-based, family-centred program aimed at improving child well-being by working with parents to identify their family's unique strengths and challenges, set goals for change, strengthen positive parenting, and connect to needed supports.

Detailed description

Prevalence rates of emotional and behavior problems (EBP) in children and youth with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are high (40-70%), and often cause severe and chronic impairment. Childhood EBP has been linked to ecological adversity (e.g., social isolation, parenting stress). Positive parenting practice can protect against adverse child outcomes such as poor self-regulation, chronic stress and EBP. Interventions aspiring to alleviate EBP in children with ASD need to involve caregivers in a collaborative, empowering and meaningful way. In the current Ontario ASD services landscape, there are no evidence-based family-centered programs that adequately address these needs. The Family Check-Up (FCU) is a brief, ecologically sensitive, evidence-based, trans-diagnostic intervention that engages families in a process of enhancing positive parenting practices to reduce child EBP. It is unique in its multi-modal assessment of ecological risk and protective factors, strength-based motivational interviewing approach and health maintenance design, providing annual check-ups during key periods of development. It may be linked to an optional, tailored "Everyday Parenting Curriculum" (EPC). Studies have demonstrated sustained, reliable, and robust positive effects on child EBP, caregiver depression, and positive parenting practices in other populations at risk, but the FCU has not been evaluated in families of autistic children and youth. Thus, the objective is to evaluate FCU implementation in the Hamilton Health Sciences (HHS) Autism Program, with delivery by autism therapists, in order to demonstrate sustainable effectiveness within real-world settings.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFamily Check-UpSee arm/group description
BEHAVIORALTreatment as UsualSee arm/group description

Timeline

Start date
2022-10-17
Primary completion
2024-08-31
Completion
2025-02-11
First posted
2022-03-15
Last updated
2025-05-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05280613. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.