The purpose of this two-year pilot study is to adapt a 12-week attachment-based parenting intervention for implementation with female adult caregivers who have or are at risk for long-term interpersonal conflict with family members, children, or significant others and are caring for a child between the ages of birth and 7 years.
The purpose of this two-year pilot study is to adapt a 12-week attachment-based parenting intervention (Parenting from the Inside Out or PIO) originally developed for substance abusing mothers (as part of an ongoing NIDA-funded treatment development study; R01 DA17294) for implementation with female adult caregivers who have or are at risk for long-term interpersonal conflict with family members, children, or significant others and are caring for a child between the ages of birth and 7 years. The PIO intervention involves 12-24 weekly 1 hour individual therapy sessions with Masters level therapists who are trained and supervised by Dr. Suchman (the Principal Investigator) in the PIO approach.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
18
12-24 weekly 1 hour individual therapy sessions with Masters level therapists who are trained and supervised by Dr. Suchman (the Principal Investigator) in the Parenting from the Inside Out approach. The broad goals of the program are to help prevent the onset of substance abuse and psychiatric disorders, promote adaptive interpersonal relationships and social-emotional functioning in caregivers and their children, and help prevent the transmission of psychiatric illness across generations
West Haven Mental Health Clinic
West Haven, Connecticut, United States
Maternal reflective functioning
PDI: Rated on a -1 to +9 scale where a score of 3 indicates simple awareness of mental states, 5 indicates rudimentary recognition of how mental states influence behavior, and above 5 indicates advance rPRFQ-1: Rated on a 7-point scale. 3 subscales: PMM (Pre-mentalizing Mode) with high scores indicating reliance on pre-reflective modes of thinking about child's behavior, NRO (Not Recognizing Opacity) with high scores indicating less recognition of the opaque nature of the child's mental states, and IC (Interest and Curiosity) with high scores indicating more interest and curiosity about the child's underlying mental states.
Time frame: Change at week 12 from baseline
Maternal reflective functioning
PDI: Rated on a -1 to +9 scale where a score of 3 indicates simple awareness of mental states, 5 indicates rudimentary recognition of how mental states influence behavior, and above 5 indicates advance rPRFQ-1: Rated on a 7-point scale. 3 subscales: PMM (Pre-mentalizing Mode) with high scores indicating reliance on pre-reflective modes of thinking about child's behavior, NRO (Not Recognizing Opacity) with high scores indicating less recognition of the opaque nature of the child's mental states, and IC (Interest and Curiosity) with high scores indicating more interest and curiosity about the child's underlying mental states.
Time frame: Change at week 24 from baseline
Coding Interactive Behavior
The caregiver-child dyad will be given age-appropriate toys and instructed to interact freely and session is videotaped and coded using CIB. Composite scores are scored on a 1 - 5 scale. Composite maternal scales include Sensitivity, Intrusiveness, Limit Setting, and Negative Emotion. Composite Child Scales include Child Involvement, Withdrawal and Compliance. Composite Dyadic Scales include Reciprocity and Dyadic Negative States.
Time frame: Change at week 12 from baseline
Coding Interactive Behavior
The caregiver-child dyad will be given age-appropriate toys and instructed to interact freely and session is videotaped and coded using CIB. Composite scores are scored on a 1 - 5 scale. Composite maternal scales include Sensitivity, Intrusiveness, Limit Setting, and Negative Emotion. Composite Child Scales include Child Involvement, Withdrawal and Compliance. Composite Dyadic Scales include Reciprocity and Dyadic Negative States.
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Time frame: Change at week 24 from baseline
Maternal parenting stress
The PSI yields five scores: Parent Dysfunction, Parent-Child Difficulty, Difficult Child, Defensive Responding, and Total Stress which are standardized to percentile rankings. We will be testing for reduction in each stress domain to below the 85th percentile.
Time frame: Change at week 12 from baseline
Maternal parenting stress
The PSI yields five scores: Parent Dysfunction, Parent-Child Difficulty, Difficult Child, Defensive Responding, and Total Stress which are standardized to percentile rankings. We will be testing for reduction in each stress domain to below the 85th percentile.
Time frame: Change at week 24 from baseline
Maternal depression
Scores range from 0 to 63. We will be testing for significant reduction in total depression.
Time frame: Change at week 12 from baseline
Maternal depression
Scores range from 0 to 63. We will be testing for significant reduction in total depression.
Time frame: Change at week 24 from baseline
Maternal global psychiatric distress
The composite Global Severity Index (GSI) from the Brief Symptom Inventory measures current overall symptomatology across multiple domains (e.g., depression, anxiety, interpersonal sensitivity, somatic complaints, paranoid ideation) and has demonstrated good reliability and validity. T scores above 60 on the GSI indicate risk for a clinical disorder.
Time frame: Change at week 12 from baseline
Maternal global psychiatric distress
The composite Global Severity Index (GSI) from the Brief Symptom Inventory measures current overall symptomatology across multiple domains (e.g., depression, anxiety, interpersonal sensitivity, somatic complaints, paranoid ideation) and has demonstrated good reliability and validity. T scores above 60 on the GSI indicate risk for a clinical disorder.
Time frame: Change at week 24 from baseline