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RECRUITING
NCT04856501
NA

A Randomized Control Trial of a Responsive Parenting Intervention to Support Healthy Brain Development and Self-regulation in Toddlers Born Preterm

Sponsor: The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether participation in the Play and Learning Strategies (PALS) parenting intervention results in increased caregiver responsiveness behaviors and to test if participation in PALS results in increases in toddler skills and/or toddler neurological development.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

15 Months - 30 Months

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

300

Start Date

2020-08-07

Completion Date

2025-06-30

Last Updated

2025-03-28

Healthy Volunteers

No

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

PALS intervention condition

The Play and Learning Strategies (PALS) intervention provides parents with behaviors that, collectively, are known as a responsive parenting style. Four constructs make up this responsive parenting style: 1) contingent responsiveness, (responses are conditionally linked to the child's signals) 2) warm sensitivity (high levels of affection and understanding of child states), 3) maintaining vs. redirecting attention, and 4) verbal scaffolding (providing child appropriate language supports). Parents assigned to this intervention will be paired with a coach who will guide them through the program over the course of 9 weekly sessions. The intervention (ePALS) will be implemented via an internet adaptation through the Children's Learning Institute's ENGAGE platform. However, ePALS could easily be adapted for other platforms and accessed with any web-enabled device.

BEHAVIORAL

Control condition

Families assigned to the control condition will be provided with a website with information corresponding to milestones of toddler development. Control families will be asked to review that week's materials before the each of the 9 weekly coach calls. The active control condition serves three important purposes: 1) Maintains an active line of communication and accurate contact records for Post-test 1 and Post-test 2 session scheduling; 2) Masks participant's awareness of intervention vs. control assignment; and 3) Approximates communication with intervention staff such that results showing ePALS effects are attributable to intervention rather than regular communication with an interventionist.

Locations (1)

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

Houston, Texas, United States