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Active Not RecruitingNCT05368714

Suubi4StrongerFamilies

Suubi4StrongerFamilies: Addressing Child Behavioral Health by Strengthening Financial Stability and Parenting Among Families in Uganda

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
967 (actual)
Sponsor
Washington University School of Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
10 Years – 14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study will examine the mechanisms by which Economic Empowerment (EE) and Family Strengthening (FS) interventions targeting social, familial and context-specific drivers affect childhood behavioral health (CBH). The study will randomly assign 900 children in mid-upper primary school (10 to 14 years) to one of the three study arms (10 schools each): 1) EE only (n=300), 2) Multiple Family Group (MFG)-based FS only (n=300), and 3) combined EE+MFG-based FS (n=300). The interventions will be provided for 12 months. Assessments will occur at baseline, 12, 24 and 36 months.

Detailed description

Children in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are burdened by significant unmet mental health needs, with prevalence rates higher than 20%. The high rates of poverty, food insecurity, stigma and an inadequate health safety net system exacerbate serious childhood behavioral health (CBH) needs and impede an effective response. Youth disruptive behavioral disorders (DBDs) are a particularly serious concern as they persist through adolescence and adulthood. DBDs are also highly related to poor physical health and interpersonal challenges in adulthood. There is a need to address the context-specific social influences on CBH. Moreover, if children's needs are to be met in SSA, then: 1) implementing interventions designed and tested in SSA, and which mobilize resources within existing child-focused institutions (families, schools) is critical; 2) combined interventions that simultaneously target SSA-specific influences on CBH (family financial stability, culturally-based parenting), and can be delivered in collaboration with child/family-serving community settings (schools, faith-based and financial institutions) are necessary; and 3) group, community and population approaches to CBH are needed to drive scalable solutions. This study will test the impact of Economic Empowerment (EE) and Family Strengthening (FS) interventions on childhood behavioral health. The study will utilize a longitudinal design with three active study conditions across 30 cluster-randomized primary schools to compare single and combination intervention options. The three study conditions are: 1) EE only, 2) MFG-based FS only, 3) combined EE+MFG-based FS. The interventions will be provided for 12 months; and assessments will occur at baseline, 12, 24 and 36 months. The study will be guided by the following specific aims: Aim 1: Examine the impact of EE only, MFG-based FS only, and combined EE+MFG-based FS on children's DBD symptoms and behavioral functioning; Aim 2: Test the influence of EE only, MFG-based FS only, and combined EE+MFG-based FS on family financial stability (e.g., food and housing stability, material assets, savings), parenting and protective family processes (e.g., family organization, caregiver/child interaction, cohesion, support) and perceptions related to help-seeking (e.g., stigma) on CBH and functioning; and assess whether these change mechanisms mediate intervention effects on DBD symptoms and behavioral functioning, and explore moderation by context-specific moderators of intervention effects; Aim 3: Qualitatively examine participants' experiences with each intervention arm.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALEconomic Empowerment (EE)EE will be provided via a child development account (CDA). CDAs provide children with basic financial education, introduce them to formal financial institutions, and incentivize them to save by matching their deposits. Any of the child's family members, relatives, or friends will be allowed and encouraged to contribute towards the CDA. The account will be matched with money from the program. The maximum family contribution to be matched by the program will be an equivalent of US $10 per month per family or US $120 for the 12-month intervention period.
BEHAVIORALMultiple Family Group based Family Strengthening (MFG-based FS)MFG-based FS approach is a family-centered, group delivered, evidence-informed, strength-based intervention designed for children and adolescents whose families struggle with poverty and associated stressors. MFG is based on building support for parents and families by providing opportunities for parents and children to communicate in a safe setting with other families who have shared experiences. The core components of MFG are known as 4Rs and 2S's: rules, responsibility, relationships, respectful communication, stress and social support. Participants in this study arm will receive 16 session of MFG-based FS sessions, delivered by delivered by trained Community Health Workers and Parent Peers.
BEHAVIORALEE plus MFG-based FSEE plus MFG-based FS directly addresses both the economic needs and mental health functioning. It will consists of an EE intervention that comprises a family monetary savings program using CDAs, and a family-based dialogue and training via MFG focused on strengthening family relationships and mental health challenges.

Timeline

Start date
2022-06-14
Primary completion
2027-03-01
Completion
2027-04-01
First posted
2022-05-10
Last updated
2026-01-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Uganda

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05368714. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.