Early intervention for maltreated infants can improve mental and physical health throughout life and benefit families and society as a whole. The New Orleans Model provides intensive assessment and treatment for families of maltreated preschool children in foster care, with recommendations to court about adoption, or permanent return to birth families. The New Orleans Model appears to have led to better informed decisions about permanent placement and to better child mental health in Louisiana. The investigators propose an exploratory randomised controlled trial investigating the effectiveness of the New Orleans Model in the Scottish context, informing the development of an economic model to explore the potential cost-effectiveness. Families with a maltreated child under 5 years of age will be offered the New Orleans Model or "case management" i.e. quality assured services as usual, using random allocation. The investigators will measure outcome using well validated measures of parent-child interaction, cognition and attachment.
The first 5 months of this trial - from December 2011 to April 2012 - is an internal pilot or "implementation period". During this time we have fewer research staff, both services will just have started and we will only be collecting selected outcome measures. These will be the Principle Outcome Measure, the Infant-Toddler Social-Emotional Assessment (ITSEA), plus the Disturbance of Attachment Interview (DAI) and Parent-Infant Global Assessment of Functioning (PIR-GAS). We hope to include data from implementation period in our trial analysis, but if results are very different due to services "bedding in", we may not do so
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
227
University of Glasgow
Glasgow, United Kingdom
Change in score on the Infant-Toddler Social-emotional Assessment (ITSEA)
The ITSEA is a well validated parent/carer-completed questionnaire covering a wide range of social and emotional behaviours in infants and preschool children. It has been shown to be sensitive to change in previous intervention research with maltreated children with medium to large effect sizes and has good longitudinal stability.
Time frame: Baseline and at 1 year follow-up
The Parent Evaluation of Development (PEDS)
A brief parent-report measure of infant language and other milestones
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up
The Disturbances of Attachment Interview (DAI)
A measure of attachment disorder.
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up
The Parent-Infant Global Assessment of Functioning (PIR-GAS)
A video-based assessment of global relationship functioning
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up
This is My Baby (TIMB)
A measure of the degree of committment to the child by the caregiver
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year Follow up
The Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA)
A diagnostic intrument generating DSM and ICD psychiatric diagnoses.
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up for children over 2 years.
Cognitive assessment
This will be either the Bayley's or the WPPSI depending on the age of the child.
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up
The Use of Services Questionnaire
This carer-report questionnaire generates service use and costs data for health economic analysis
Time frame: Baseline and 1 year follow up
The Strange Situation Procedure (SSP)
This is the gold standard measure for infant/toddler attachment patterns.
Time frame: 1 year follow up only
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