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Promotion of Successful Parenting
Sponsor: University of Rochester
Summary
Home visitation by community health workers is a commonly utilized approach to support families and prevent child maltreatment. At times, however, more intensive intervention is needed to address familial trauma, depression, or other challenges. This preventive treatment evaluation study evaluates whether adding Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) to a Community Health Worker (CHW) outreach model improves positive parenting and parent-child relationships above CHW alone. The efficacy of CPP has been demonstrated with maltreated and other high-risk populations. This evaluation will examine optimal timing of CPP (beginning prenatally or postnatally) and optimal duration of services (6 vs. 12 months). Additionally, how and for whom CPP is most effective and why will be examined. Assessments of parenting, maternal sensitivity, representational models, cognitions, physiological reactivity, and physical health indicators will be assessed prenatally, and at children's age of 3, 9, and 12 months.
Official title: TRANSFORM: Translational Research That Adapts New Science FOR Maltreatment Prevention
Key Details
Gender
FEMALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
222
Start Date
2019-02-21
Completion Date
2024-12-31
Last Updated
2026-05-14
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)
Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) focuses on parent-infant relationships, increases efficacy for improved mother-child relationships, more sensitive parenting, healthier child development, and maltreatment prevention. A primary goal is to strengthen the parent-child relationship to improve family functioning and child security of attachment. Through respect, empathic concern, and positive regard, the therapeutic relationship provides mothers with corrective emotional experiences, through which they are able to differentiate current from past relationships, form positive internal representations of themselves and of themselves in relationship to others, particularly their children. Parents are encouraged to process their experiences of trauma and restore parental roles as protective shields, improve affective regulation capacities, enhance understanding of the meaning of behavior, acknowledge the impact of trauma, and support children in a more positive developmental trajectory.
Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation
Community Health Worker (CHW) home visitation includes assistance with concrete support needs, such as transportation to medical appointments, referrals for food, housing, and employment services, and attention to developmental needs of young children.
Locations (1)
Mt. Hope Family Center
Rochester, New York, United States