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The Playful Learning in Infancy Program
Sponsor: University of Copenhagen
Summary
In the Playful Learning in Infancy Program, parents receive research-based educational guidance on playful interactions with their infants aged 0-1 year. They learn to recognize their infants' cues indicating readiness to engage in play and they are introduced to specific, developmentally appropriate activities for interactive engagement. The guidance is delivered to parents during routine home visits by public health visitors. The aims of the Playful Learning in Infancy Program are to 1) promote playful interactions between infants and parents, parental attitudes towards play, and infant socioemotional development; 2) enhance the language and knowledge of playful learning in infancy among frontline staff; and 3) evaluate the Playful Learning in Infancy Program for potential testing in a future large-scale RCT study. Evaluation is based on a parallel group study design, with half of the participants receiving care as usual and half of the participants receiving care as usual along with the Playful Learning in Infancy Program.
Official title: The Playful Learning in Infancy Program (PLIP): A Pilot Feasibility Study of an Universal Educational Parenting Program Using a Parallel Group Design
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
2327
Start Date
2023-06-01
Completion Date
2026-11-30
Last Updated
2024-04-08
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Playful Learning in Infancy Program
Research-based knowledge on play with babies delivered to the parents systematically by public health visitors based on a manual, activity cards, and video clips at four time points from 0 to 12 months postpartum.
Postnatal care as usual
In accordance with Danish national guidelines, health visitors visit families during the infants first year of life, where they weigh and measure the infant. Further, they offer individual guidance and support regarding for instance feeding, sleeping, how to stimulate the infant, and the developmental stages that the infant goes through.
Locations (1)
Center for Early Interventions and Family Studies, Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark