The goal of this behavioral, interventional clinical trial is to provide a specialized workshop training for dental providers (e.g., dentists, hygienists, assistants) to improve interactions with young children (2-10 years old) and parents/caregivers. The training is derived from a well-established behavior management program for preschoolers, Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT). The main questions it aims to answer are: * Change in behavior of dental providers * Acceptability of training by dental providers All participants will receive the same behavior training; however, one group will receive the training on a delayed schedule. Researchers will compare the immediate intervention and control group to see if the training was effective in the dental providers usage of skills.
This is a cluster randomized clinical trial, with a two-group, parallel, delayed treatment design. After being informed abut the study and potential risks, all dental provider participants giving written informed consent will be randomized by dental clinic/office to one of the two groups, the training (immediate intervention) group or the delayed (control) training group. Both groups will be filmed using very small and unobtrusive digital video recorders in their dental office/practice/clinic prior to the training workshop to assess for behavioral skills used with their child patients, child adherence, child fear/anxiety, and child on-task behavior. During the training workshop, dental provider participants will complete a set of measures at the start of the workshop on their knowledge of the specific behavioral skills being presented in the training and factors contributing to their ability and willingness to implement evidence- based training components (i.e., adoption, appropriateness, feasibility, penetration, sustainability). In addition, they will be asked to demonstrate and practice their behavioral interaction skills with trained simulated child patients in a dental simulation. The workshop will take place over the course of an 8-hour training day. At the end of the day, dental providers will complete the knowledge quiz, simulation procedure, and a measure of acceptability of the training and learned skills. Both the training and the delayed training control groups will be video recorded in their clinics at a 2-month post workshop to determine skill level. At the same time, the assessment measure for the implementation of the evidence-based training components will be completed. During the video-recorded clinic sessions, consenting families will participate in their child's dental appointment and be asked to complete reports of child behavior, child anxiety/fear, and acceptability of the research procedures/dental practice via validated instruments. As in the R21 project, both preventive and operative appointments will be included, for generalization. After visit completion, dental staff will complete a rating of child anxiety/fear, child behavior, and a self-report of acceptability of the research procedures.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
264
The immediate intervention group will be video recorded in office and participate in the training workshop and assessment methods two months after.
The delayed training group will also be video recorded in office but will wait an additional two months and then participate in the training and assessment methods as with the original training group.
University of Arkansas
Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States
RECRUITINGUniversity of Florida
Gainesville, Florida, United States
RECRUITINGUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGWest Virginia University
Morgantown, West Virginia, United States
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGTo assess dental providers' usage of DCIT behavioral methods in the training workshop.
Frequency counts of Dental-Child Interaction Training (DCIT) positive (i.e., increases/change in labeled praises, behavior descriptions, direct commands) and negative (i.e., decreases/change in negative talk and no-opportunity-to-comply commands) behavioral methods and ratio of those behaviors to all coded provider behaviors involved in the interaction of the child to evaluate whether participants show demonstrated skill change as a result of the workshop. Outcome measured by observation of video-taped interactions between dental provider and (simulated) children using Dental-Dyadic Parent-Child Interaction Coding System (D-DPICS).
Time frame: Immediately pre- and post-workshop
To assess dental providers' knowledge of DCIT principles and methods.
Providers will be tested before and after the training on basic knowledge and principles and application of Dental-Child Interaction Training (DCIT) skills using a 20-item self-report instrument to assess providers' knowledge and level of understanding of DCIT behavioral principles. Outcome measured by the Dental Provider DCIT Skills Knowledge assessment. A total of 20 questions using a multiple choice and free response format.
Time frame: Immediately pre- and post-workshop
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