This treatment development study is aimed at developing and pilot testing a 20-week remotely delivered group intervention that integrates two evidence-based treatments: 1) Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Skills - targeting parental emotion dysregulation and substance use, and 2) Parent Training (PT) - targeting parenting behaviors linked to children's mental health. The case study will provide preliminary data on the feasibility of the DBT Skills +PT intervention and its engagement of the targeted outcomes, and aims to complete foundational steps necessary to conducting a future, larger scale randomized controlled trial. Specific aims are to: 1. Determine feasibility, acceptability and implementation. 2. Evaluate pre-post changes in measures of parental emotion dysregulation, parenting quality and children's mental health.
Overview This treatment development study is aimed at developing and pilot testing a 20-week remotely delivered group intervention that integrates two evidence-based treatments: 1) Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Skills - targeting parental emotion dysregulation and substance use, and 2) Parent Training (PT) - targeting parenting behaviors linked to children's mental health. The case study will provide preliminary data on the feasibility of the DBT Skills +PT intervention and its engagement of the targeted outcomes, and aims to complete foundational steps necessary to conducting a future, larger scale randomized controlled trial. Specific aims are to: 1. Determine feasibility, acceptability and implementation. Number of sessions attended by parents and attrition rates will be assessed to determine overall feasibility of the intervention. Acceptability will be evaluated using measures of client satisfaction. Implementation will be assessed by examining the frequency with which clients report using DBT and parenting skills. 2. Evaluate pre-post changes in measures of parental emotion dysregulation, parenting quality and children's mental health. Across 12 parents (three groups with \~4 parents in each group), we will evaluate the change in these interlinked domains which represent risk factors for relapse and further adverse outcomes. We anticipate pre-post changes (2 time points, approximately 20-22 weeks apart) will be comparable to well-established change scores from the clinical trial literature base for DBT Skills and parent training interventions. The study will be conducted remotely and involves five phases: 1) an online screener questionnaire; 2) a clinical diagnostic intake interview to formally determine eligibility; 3) an online pre-intervention assessment survey; 4) 20 weeks of DBT Skills +PT group therapy; 5) an online post-intervention assessment survey. All online screeners and assessments will be completed using Qualtrics. The clinical diagnostic intake interview, weekly DBT Skills +PT sessions and exit interviews will all be conducted over a HIPAA compliant version of Zoom. Assignment of Participants to Condition All participating parents will be assigned to the DBT Skills +PT condition. Up to 12 parents will be enrolled in the DBT Skills +PT group therapy. As the intervention is scheduled for 20 weeks, families will be recruited twice throughout the year to facilitate running 3 groups (\~4 participants in each). Data Analysis Results from this case study to pilot test the integrated DBT Skills +PT intervention will be descriptive. For Aim 1, feasibility of the intervention will be evaluated by calculating the average number of sessions attended by parents and attrition rates. Acceptability will be examined by averaging the total scores obtained from the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8). We will examine implementation by calculating the average daily number of DBT and parenting skills parents report using each week on their diary card (averaged across parents) and comparing these to skill use reported in other published research. We will primarily report data for Aim 1 at an aggregated group level. For Aim 2, we will examine pre-post changes for primary and secondary outcomes - parental emotion dysregulation, parenting quality, child internalizing and externalizing behaviors, child emotion regulation, and parent mental health symptoms. Pre-post change scores will be compared to the clinical trial literature base for DBT and parent training interventions which often use the same measures and for which expected change scores are established.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
12
The DBT Skills +PT group intervention integrates DBT Skills, Parent Management Training (PMT), and Emotion Coaching (EC). Each session includes a mindfulness practice, homework review to discuss use of skills previously learned, didactics to learn a new set of DBT and PT skills, and assignment of homework. The DBT Skills portions cover the four modules of traditional DBT Skills: Mindfulness, Emotion Regulation, Distress Tolerance (including skills specifically focused on managing difficulties with addiction), and Interpersonal Effectiveness. PT skills include both PMT and EC components such as: praise, use of parental attention to reward positive behavior, reward systems, effective commands and consequences, psychoeducation on children's emotional development, teaching children to label emotions, validating children's emotions, and handling children's negative emotions, and fostering positive emotions.
University of Oregon
Eugene, Oregon, United States
Parental Emotion Dysregulation - The Difficulties With Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS)
The Difficulties with Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS; Gratz \& Roemer, 2004) is a 36-item self-report measure used to assess adult emotion dysregulation. Items are rated on a scale of 1 to 5, and total scores range from 36 to 180, with higher scores indicating higher levels of dysregulation.
Time frame: Baseline and post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parenting Stress - Parenting Stress Index Short Form
The Parenting Stress Index Short Form (PSI-4 SF; Abidin, 1995) is a 36-item parent report measure of parental stress (rated on a five point Likert scale), and includes three subscales: Parental Distress, Parent-Child Dysfunctional Interaction, and Difficult Child. Raw Subscale scores are summed into a Total Stress score that ranges from 36 to 180, with higher scores indicating higher levels of parenting stress. Normative scores have been established and raw scores are then converted to percentiles for interpretation.
Time frame: Baseline and post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parenting Quality (Total Dysfunctional Discipline) - The Parenting Scale
The Parenting Scale (PS; Arnold et al., 1993) is a 30-item self-report questionnaire, in which parents are asked to describe (on a Likert scale of 1-7) how they respond to a variety of child misbehaviors. In addition to three sub scales (laxness, over-reactivity and hostile parenting), it yields a total dysfunctional discipline score, which is calculated by averaging responses on all items. Total scores can thus range from 1 to 7, with higher scores reflecting greater dysfunctional discipline.
Time frame: Baseline and post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parental Emotion Socialization (Non-supportive Parenting) - Coping With Children's Negative Emotions Scale (CCNES)
The Coping with Children's Negative Emotions Scale (CCNES; Fabes, Eisenberg \& Bernzweig, 1990) assesses parental self-report of emotion socialization practices. Parents are presented with 12 vignettes describing scenarios in which their children exhibit distress. Parents rate (on a Likert scale of 1-7) the likelihood they would engage in 6 potential parental responses to these situations, with each corresponding to 6 subscales which are each mean-scored: distress reactions, punitive reactions, minimization, expressive encouragement, emotion-focused reactions and problem-focused reactions. The first three can then be summed and mean-scored into an Invalidating/non-supportive composite and the latter three can be summed and mean-scored into a Validating/Supportive composite. Scores for the composites range from 1 to 7 with higher scores indicating higher levels of non-supportive or supportive parenting.
Time frame: Baseline and post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Acceptability (Client Satisfaction) - Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8)
The Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8; Attkisson \& Zwick, 1982) will be used to assess acceptability of the intervention. It is a brief 8-item self-report measure in which clients are asked to rate (on a Likert scale of 1-4) their satisfaction with the intervention. Scores range from 8 to 32 with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction.
Time frame: Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Feasibility of Intervention (Attendance)
Average number of sessions attended
Time frame: Post-intervention (20 week timepoint)
Feasibility of Intervention (Attrition)
Attrition rate was measured as percentage of participants who discontinued treatment.
Time frame: Post-intervention (20 week timepoint)
Implementation of Skills
Weekly avg. number of DBT and parenting skills used daily
Time frame: Baseline up to 22 weeks
Child Externalizing Behaviors - Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL)
The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL; Achenbach \& Rescorla, 2000) is a 99-item parent-report ratings scale (items are rated from 0-2) for children's problem behaviors. The scale provide subscales for both internalizing (e.g. anxious, sad) and externalizing (e.g. hyperactive, aggressive) behaviors. Normative scores have been established and total summed raw scores are converted to T-scores and percentiles for interpretation. T-scores range from 28 to 100, with a population mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10. Higher T-scores indicate greater problem behaviors and symptoms of psychopathology.
Time frame: Baseline and Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Child Emotion Dysregulation - Emotion Regulation Checklist (Lability/Negativity Subscale)
The Emotion Regulation Checklist (ERC; Shields \& Cicchetti, 1997) is a 24-item parent-report measure in which parents rate (on a Likert scale of 1-4) how characteristic of their child are statements which focus on mood lability, lack of flexibility, dysregulated negative emotion, empathy, emotional self-awareness and positive response to others. Items are summed to produce produce two subscales (lability/negativity and emotion regulation). The negativity/lability subscale ranges from 15 to 60 with higher scores indicating higher levels of emotional lability/negativity.
Time frame: Baseline and Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parent Mental Health Symptoms: Anxiety - Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A)
The Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAM-A; Hamilton, 1969) is a 14-item self-report measure that assesses physical symptoms of anxiety. Subjects rate the severity of symptoms ranging from 0 (Not present) to 4 (Very Severe). Scores are summed for a total score ranging from 0 to 56, with higher scores indicating higher levels of anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline and Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parent Mental Health Symptoms: Depression - Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Module (PHQ-9)
The Patient Health Questionnaire - depression module (PHQ-9; Kroenke, Spitzer, \& Williams, 2001) is a 9-item self-report questionnaire in which participants rate how often depressive symptoms have bothered them in the past 2 weeks on a scale of 0 (Not at all) to 3 (Nearly every day). Scores are summed for a total score ranging from 0 to 27 with higher scores indicating higher levels of depressed mood.
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Time frame: Baseline and Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)
Parent Mental Health Symptoms: Substance Craving
The Aggregated Drug Craving Scale (ADCS; Costello et al., 2020) is an adaptation of the Penn Alcohol Craving Scale (PACS; Flannery et al., 1999) aimed at measuring a broad range of substance craving. The measure includes five items that assess intensity, frequency, and duration of craving along with ability to resist substance use if it was available, and it asks responders to give an average craving rating for the past week. The response ranges from 0 to 6 for each item. Responses are summed to provide a total score ranging from 0 to 30, and higher scores indicate greater cravings.
Time frame: Baseline and Post-intervention (22 week timepoint)