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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06050486
NA

A Mentalization-based Intervention for Children of Parent(s) With Borderline Personality Disorder

Sponsor: University of Minho

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Background and study aims? Parents with borderline personality disorder (BPD) can present parenting difficulties such as expressions of hostility, low sensitivity, and overprotection. These parenting problems are associated with adverse outcomes for the offspring, namely, borderline features, depression, internalizing and externalizing problems, and interpersonal difficulties. Intervention studies with parent(s) who have borderline personality disorder show promising results regarding the improvement of parenting skills and parent-infant relationship. However, very few assess their effect on child's mental health and development. This study aims to evaluate the acceptability, feasibility and preliminary effectiveness of a mentalization-based clinical intervention, directed to school-aged children of mothers and/or fathers with borderline personality disorder, to reduce child mental health problems, in the short- and medium-term. Who can participate? School-aged children (5 to 12 years of age), with mental health problems (CBCL internalizing and/or externalizing scores must be T = 60 or above), and their mothers and/or fathers (\> 18 years of age) with subclinical or clinical BPD. What does the study involve? Mother and/or father with BPD complete an online survey and an online interview. If available, the other parent and the child's teacher complete an online survey, separately. The child completes an online task with a researcher's assistance. After, participants are assigned to an intervention group (one arm, pre-posttest study). Participants receive a mentalization-based treatment for children (MBT-C), starting one week after the pre-test. MBT-C is a psychological intervention designed to resolve the child's mental health problems and promote resilience by promoting the child's and parent's mentalizing capacities. It aims to be delivered by a mental healthcare professional trained in MBT-C. In this clinical trial MBT-C will be composed of: 3 assessment sessions; 12 individual sessions with the child, plus 6 parallel individual sessions with the parent with BPD; 1 follow-up family session, 3 months after the last session. Assessment sessions are composed of one family session, one session with the child and one session with the parent. Sessions with child are in-site and sessions with parent can be on-line or in-site, according to the parents' preference. Sessions have a weekly frequency and a 50-60 minutes duration each. One week after the last intervention session participants repeat the same assessments completed before MBT-C. In addition, child and mother and/or father with BPD complete separately an online satisfaction survey and an online interview to assess participants experiences with MBT-C. The investigators expect that after receiving MBT-C the child's mental health problems will have significantly decreased and to obtain information on the feasibility of a future large-scale clinical trial and retrospective acceptability of MBT-C with this specific population. What are the possible benefits and risks of participating? This intervention aims to resolve child's mentals mental health problems. Patients who do not meet the inclusion criteria to participate, do not consent, or withdraw from the trial will be offered a debrief and the possibility of being referred to individualized psychological support or other if needed. If child's mental health problems are not resolve by the end of MBT-C the same possibility will be offered. At the end of MBT-C mother and/or father with BPD will be referred to individual therapy, if needed and not already receiving. Intervention with BPD parents can present challenges, such as ambivalence within the therapeutic relationship (high idealization versus therapist rejection), and high drop-out rates. To overcome these difficulties, the therapist should be knowledgeable about BPD, foster a secure-based relationship with the parent and child, and maintain an empathetic stance. It is possible for parent(s) with BPD to maltreat or abuse their children, in which case child protective services must be contacted and informed. The same procedure must be adopted in case of substantial substance abuse.

Official title: A Mentalization-based Treatment for Children (MBT-C) of Parent(s) With Borderline Personality Disorder: A Pilot Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

5 Years - 12 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

8

Start Date

2023-09-11

Completion Date

2025-05-31

Last Updated

2025-04-03

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Mentalization-based treatment for children (MBT-C)

MBT-C is a time-limited intervention designed to resolve the child's emotional or behavioral problems and to promote resilience, by promoting the child's and parent's mentalizing capacities. It is composed by 1) an assessment phase, composed of 3 to 4 sessions, with the family, the child and the parent(s), 2) an intervention phase, composed of a minimum block of 12 individual sessions with the child and parallel sessions for the parent(s), that can be repeated up to three times (i.e., maximum of 36 sessions), and 3) a booster session 3 to 12 months after the last session. In this clinical trial, MBT-C will be composed of: 3 assessment sessions; 12 individual sessions with the child, plus 6 parallel individual sessions with the parent with BPD; 1 booster family session, 3 months after the last session.

Locations (1)

University of Minho

Braga, Braga District, Portugal