This study capitalizes on an opportunity to formally evaluate local adaptations of "Keeping Foster and Kinship Parents Supported and Trained" (KEEP), an evidence-based foster parent intervention, to reduce mental health disparities among child welfare-involved youth and improve care quality and long-term outcomes for Native, Hispanic/Latino, Black/African American, and sexual and gender minority youth. The knowledge gained from the study will impact all current and future large-scale implementations of KEEP and will bolster our scientific understanding the impact of KEEP on youth mental health outcomes.
This study capitalizes on a contract with the Oregon Department of Human Services Child Welfare to implement KEEP state wide in Oregon with a focus on increasing access to services for minority youth populations. To help the child welfare system meet their goal of achieving health equity, adaptations to the KEEP curriculum have been made for minority groups, and KEEP is being delivered in "affinity groups". Affinity KEEP groups are tailored to meet a specific population's needs and are comprised of parents who all share a common interest, purpose, or key characteristic. To date, Affinity KEEP groups are being offered for foster/kin parents of populations defined by sexual and gender minority youth and Native youth, and for Spanish-speaking parents. The curriculum is currently being revised for transracial foster/kin placements where the youth and one or more parents are of a different race/ethnicity. The current proposal seeks to study N = 166 new families, as part of the ongoing Oregon KEEP implementation, and aggregate existing data from four KEEP studies to use propensity score matching to reduce selection bias and strengthen causal inferences that can be drawn from the potential benefits of providing KEEP to underserved minority populations. By leveraging two decades worth of data on the KEEP intervention and using state-of-the-art data harmonization techniques and a quasi-experimental design, this study affords a rigorous evaluation of whether tailoring the KEEP curriculum to minority populations' specific needs, and providing KEEP to foster/kin parents, improves youth mental health outcomes (i.e., depression/anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms, suicidality, and externalizing behaviors) (Aim 1). The study could have a wide reach, impacting our understanding of how to improve and inform equitable delivery of services to youth and families involved in the child welfare system, and effectively address youth mental health disorders and improve care quality and long-term outcomes for a high-risk, underserved population of youth.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
283
The KEEP model focuses on optimizing the role of foster/kin parents as the agents of positive change for children and youth. Parent KEEP groups for children (ages 4-12) and KEEP-Safe groups for teens (ages 13-19) are delivered by two co-group leaders for 16 weeks. Sessions are 90 minutes each week. The same group of 8-10 foster/kin parents attends each week. Each KEEP group follows a manualized curriculum that emphasizes tailoring the content to the unique needs of the parents and youth in the group. The key parenting principles of the model include: (a) reinforce normative and prosocial behavior, (b) incentivize the behavior that parents want to promote, (c) build cooperation, (d) teach new behaviors, (e) use non-harsh effective limit setting, and (f) manage emotions while parenting.
Non-Affinity KEEP
Oregon Social Learning Center
Eugene, Oregon, United States
Mean change in youth depression and anxiety symptoms
Psychometric scoring techniques will be used to harmonize items across multiple KEEP studies and instruments. Specifically, moderated nonlinear factor analysis will be utilized to estimate depression and anxiety symptoms factor scores that account for differential item functioning and impact across the set of study- and person-level covariates. Youth depression and anxiety symptoms will be measured via parent report using items from the Child Behavior Checklist and Parent Daily Report at baseline and 6-months post-baseline.
Time frame: Baseline and 6-months post-baseline
Mean change in youth post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms
Psychometric scoring techniques will be used to harmonize items across multiple KEEP studies and instruments. Specifically, moderated nonlinear factor analysis will be utilized to estimate PTSD symptoms factor scores that account for differential item functioning and impact across the set of study- and person-level covariates. Youth PTSD symptoms will be measured via parent report using items from the Child Behavior Checklist and Parent Daily Report at baseline and 6-months post-baseline.
Time frame: Baseline and 6-months post-baseline
Mean change in youth self harming behaviors and suicidal ideation
Measured via parent report using the Child Behavior Checklist at baseline and 6-months post-baseline
Time frame: Baseline and 6-months post-baseline
Mean change in youth externalizing behaviors
Psychometric scoring techniques will be used to harmonize items across multiple KEEP studies and instruments. Specifically, moderated nonlinear factor analysis will be utilized to estimate externalizing behavior factor scores that account for differential item functioning and impact across the set of study- and person-level covariates. Youth externalizing behaviors will be measured via parent report using items from the Child Behavior Checklist and Parent Daily Report at baseline and 6-months post-baseline.
Time frame: Baseline and 6-months post-baseline
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