Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05927116

RCT of a Mobile Phone App-based Intervention for Parents of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

A Mobile Phone App-based Intervention for Supporting and Empowering Parents of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD): a Randomised Waitlist-controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
852 (actual)
Sponsor
Chinese University of Hong Kong · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of a 6-week mobile app-based intervention in empowering and supporting Chinese parents of ASD children through knowledge and skills transfer and mindfulness training, to explore factors associated with enhanced user experiences and sustained usage through participants' qualitative feedback and observing naturalistic usage patterns beyond the active intervention period, and to refine the mobile app based on the data prior to wider dissemination of the app. We hypothesise that there will be a greater reduction in parental stress and mood symptoms, and improvement of mindfulness attitude and parenting competence in parents with ASD children after the 6-week app-based intervention than the waitlist controls.

Detailed description

Parents of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) children are often stressed about challenges in raising their children with multifaceted needs, and their stress could undermine the child's development. With the ever-increasing demand in clinical services and disruptions by coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19), we aim to investigate the clinical efficacy of a mobile app-based intervention in reducing stress and mood symptoms, and enhancing mindfulness and competence in parents of children with ASD. The 6-week mobile app-based intervention programme is a structured course of mindfulness training, and knowledge and skills transfer of parenting ASD children with specific content personalised to the participant's needs, which was developed as an accessible and scalable primary-level care platform to improve the well-being of parents. In this study, a pragmatic, randomized waitlist-controlled trial will be conducted. 700 parents of ASD children who are ≤12 years of age and either 1. waiting for, or 2. actively receiving treatment from a regional children psychiatric specialist clinic will be recruited. Parents will be randomized into an immediate intervention arm and a waitlist arm. Parental stress level, mood symptoms, competence, and level of mindfulness will be measured before, immediately after, and 2 months after the intervention with self-reported questionnaires. Outcome measurement of pre- and post-intervention from the two groups of participants will be analysed with a Mixed Factorial ANOVA. A treatment x time effect on the outcome measurement is expected. The results of the proposed study will provide evidence to the real-life efficacy of a mobile app-based intervention service model to support parents of children with ASD in the era of digital mental health. As the impact of mental well-being of parents extends beyond the parents themselves, effective management of the elevated level of parental stress in ASD families is beneficial to the family functioning and long-term development of the child. The solid evidence from this sizable clinical trial can also inform clinicians and service-users in choosing the evidence-based intervention suitable to their context, among the range of commercially available products with claimed efficacy.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERMobile phone app-based intervention for supporting and empowering parents of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD)TRIP is a mobile app-based intervention comprises of a 6-week structured training on mindfulness and educational modules on ASD parenting skills.

Timeline

Start date
2024-01-01
Primary completion
2026-02-23
Completion
2026-02-23
First posted
2023-07-03
Last updated
2026-03-30

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Hong Kong

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05927116. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.