Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05479734

Promoting Resilience and Lowering Risk in Early Childhood

Promoting Resilience and Lowering Risk in Early Childhood: An mHealth Intervention Study

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
24 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Oklahoma · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
0 Years – 99 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

An intervention study to provide in-the-moment parenting tips with the goal of increasing healthy parent-child interactions leading to resiliency in high-risk children. Specifically, in a sample of parents participating in HV programs, the investigators will use a smartphone app (mHealth app) to deliver daily tailored messages with tips on monitoring and promoting child development. Daily assessments of parents' emotions, parenting behaviors, and interactions with their children will also be collected via the app. During the 4-week EMA study, parents will receive either 2 weeks of the mHealth intervention + EMA data collection followed by 2 weeks of only EMA data collection or to receive 2 weeks of only EMA data collection followed by 2 weeks of mHealth intervention + EMA data collection.

Detailed description

This is an intervention study to provide in-the-moment parenting tips with the goal of educating parents about monitoring and promoting child development, thereby increasing healthy parent-child interactions leading to resiliency in high-risk children. Specifically, in a sample of parents participating in a HV program, the investigators will use a smartphone app (mHealth app) to deliver twice-daily tailored messages with tips on monitoring and promoting child development. Ecological momentary assessments (EMA) of parents' emotions, parenting behaviors, and interactions with their children will also be collected via the mHealth app. Building off previous work the investigators expect that parents will evidence greater engagement in positive parenting practices on days when they receive the mobile-based parenting tips and strategies relative to on days when they do not receive this content. The investigators hypothesize that in-the-moment parenting tips delivered around peak times of parent-child interactions (i.e., before work/school, mealtimes, and bedtime) will promote positive parenting practices in a sample of parents at increased risk of adversity exposure. The investigators aim to use EMA methodology to measure both group level differences (i.e., intervention vs. services as usual) and within-person fluctuations in harsh parenting, children's emotional and behavioral functioning, and positive parenting practices. The study will evaluate the following aims and hypotheses: Aim 1. Conduct a 2-arm, randomized, controlled crossover trial to examine the feasibility and effectiveness of a mobile-based parenting app with parents participating in HV services. Hypothesis 1a. Parents will report high rates of satisfaction and usability. Hypothesis 1b. Parents will evidence greater engagement in positive parenting practices on days when they receive the mobile-based parenting tips and strategies relative to days when they do not receive this content. Hypothesis 1c. Groups will evidence increases in positive parenting subscale scores after a month of app engagement. Aim 2. Utilize EMA data and follow-up assessments to examine the impact of positive parenting practices on the promotion of child development. Hypothesis 2a. Children will demonstrate less challenging and more positive behavioral functioning on days when their parents receive positive parenting tips. Hypothesis 2b. Groups will evidence increases in developmental scores after a month of app engagement.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALmHealth InterventionA smartphone app (mHealth app) will deliver daily tailored messages with tips on monitoring and promoting child development and positive parenting tips.

Timeline

Start date
2022-11-07
Primary completion
2023-06-12
Completion
2023-06-12
First posted
2022-07-29
Last updated
2025-10-14
Results posted
2025-10-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05479734. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.