This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a hybrid human-digital playful parenting programme, "Naungan Kasih-Hybrid (NK-Hybrid)", in Malaysia. The programme is facilitated by teachers from Malaysian preschools for low-income families, consisting of a) one in-person session to introduce caregivers to the programme, b) teacher-facilitated WhatsApp support groups, and c) an interactive chatbot-led parenting programme featured on WhatsApp, called "Naungan Kasih-Text (NKText)". It tests the effectiveness of this package in a cluster-randomised trial, with 50 preschools as clusters, randomly assigned to either the treatment group or a waitlist control group. Findings from this study will provide evidence for the effectiveness of a low-cost and scalable intervention integrating digital modalities with a "light-touch" in-person component to improve educational outcomes in children attending preschools for low-income families, and thereby address social inequalities in Malaysia. N = 50 Clusters, 772 Primary Caregivers, 304 Secondary Caregivers, and 754 Children. Enrolment reflects participating primary caregivers.
The primary aims of the study are to: Evaluate the effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on positive parenting at three months post-baseline in comparison to wait-list controls Evaluate the effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on child learning and development, as measured by parent and teacher reports of language and communication, literacy, socioemotional, and numeracy skills, and by direct assessments of literacy and numeracy skills, at approximately 12 months post-baseline in comparison to wait-list controls Secondary aims of the study include: Evaluate the sustained effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on positive parenting at approximately 12 months post-baseline. Evaluate the effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on children's learning, namely their literacy and numeracy skills, in comparison to the control group, at three months post-baseline Evaluate the effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on secondary outcomes - parent involvement in playful learning, child maltreatment (physical and emotional abuse), caregiver anxiety and depression, parenting stress, child externalising symptoms, child learning and development, caregiver financial stress, intimate partner violence, marital health, co-parenting support, father involvement, and gender equitable behaviours - at approximately three months post-baseline and 12 months post-baseline. Evaluate the intervention costs and cost-effectiveness of NK-Hybrid on primary outcomes of positive parenting and child literacy and numeracy skills. Evaluate the association between engagement in the NK-Hybrid intervention and primary and secondary outcomes. Explore potential mediators of positive parenting, child literacy and numeracy skills, child maltreatment, child externalising symptoms, and caregiver depression and anxiety at 12 months post-baseline. Explore potential moderators of positive parenting, child literacy and numeracy skills, child maltreatment, child externalising symptoms, and caregiver depression and anxiety based on socio-demographics and psychosocial assessments at baseline In line with the study's primary and secondary objectives, the following hypotheses have been defined a priori and will be evaluated using the methods outlined in this statistical analysis plan. Hypothesis 1a: Caregivers in the treatment group will show higher levels of positive parenting, in comparison to the control group, at 3 months post-baseline. Hypothesis 1b: Children in the treatment group will show greater improvements in early learning and development, namely their literacy and numeracy skills, in comparison to the control group, at 12 months post-baseline. Hypothesis 2a: Caregivers in the treatment group will show higher levels of positive parenting, in comparison to the control group, at 12 months post-baseline. Hypothesis 2b: Children in the treatment group will show greater improvements in learning, namely their literacy and numeracy skills, in comparison to the control group, at three months post-baseline. Hypothesis 2c: Caregivers in the treatment group will show lower levels of child maltreatment (physical and emotional abuse), anxiety and depression, parenting stress, child externalising symptoms, financial stress, and intimate partner violence, in comparison to the control group, at 3 months and 12 months post-baseline. Hypothesis 2d: Caregivers in the treatment group will show higher levels of parent involvement in playful learning, marital health, co-parenting support, father involvement, and gender equitable behaviours in comparison to the control group, at 3 months and 12 months post-baseline. Hypothesis 3a: The intervention will be more cost-effective than the control condition for the primary outcomes, yielding a cost per unit of effect that supports decision-making by relevant stakeholders. Hypothesis 3b: Higher engagement with intervention components (i.e., in-person onboarding, NKText, and WhatsApp support groups) will be associated with greater improvements in the aforementioned primary and secondary outcomes.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
772
The programme is facilitated by teachers from Malaysian preschools for low-income families, consisting of a) one in-person session to introduce caregivers to the programme, b) teacher-facilitated WhatsApp support groups, and c) an interactive chatbot-led parenting programme featured on WhatsApp, called "Naungan Kasih-Text".
Universiti Putra Malaysia
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Child early learning and development
Children's early learning and development (caregiver- and teacher-report) will be measured using 23 items from the National Preschool Standards-Based Curriculum Assessment (Malaysia); scale = 0-2; higher score indicates better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Positive Parenting
Positive parenting will be measured using 14 items from the Parenting Young Children Scale (PARYC) (McEachern et al., 2012). (Caregiver Report); (0-6); higher score indicates better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Child Literacy and Numeracy
Direct child assessments of child learning and development will be conducted by trained research assistants and assessed using an adapted version of the Remote Assessment of Learning (ReAL) High-Access version (Save the Children International, 2021), specifically the Literacy and Numeracy subscales. 12 domains, total score = mean of % correct for each domain; higher score indicates better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Parent involvement in playful learning
Parent involvement in playful learning will be measured using four items from the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) Child Development Module/Family Care Indicators (Kariger et al., 2012). (4 items) (0-8 times in last two weeks) - higher indicates more playful learning activities (better outcome)
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Child Maltreatment
Child maltreatment will be measured using six items from the International Society for the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect Child Abuse Screening Tool (Meinck et al., 2018), covering physical violence (two items) and psychological violence (four items). (Parent Report); (0-8 times in last two weeks) - higher indicates more incidence of abuse (worse outcome)
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Child externalising symptoms
Child externalising symptoms will be assessed using 12 items from the externalising subscale of the Child and Adolescent Behavior Inventory (CABI) (Cianchetti et al., 2013); (0-2); higher score indicates worse outcome
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Parenting Stress
Parenting stress will be assessed using six items from the Parenting Stress Scale (Berry \& Jones, 2016); (0-5); higher score indicates worse outcome
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Anxiety and depression
Anxiety and depression will be assessed using four items from the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-4) Scale (Kroenke et al., 2009); (0-3); higher score indicates worse outcome
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Father involvement with the child
Father involvement with the child will be assessed using seven items from an adapted version of the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire Involvement Subscale (Frick, 1991); (0-4); higher score indicates better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Gender equitable behaviours
Gender equitable behaviours will be assessed using four items informed by measures commonly used in violence prevention research (Abramsky et al., 2020; Doyle et al., 2018); (1-5); higher score indicates better outcome
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Co-parenting support
Co-parenting support will be assessed using six items from the Co-parenting Relationship Scale (Feinberg et al., 2012); (0-3); higher score indicates better outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Marital health/quality
Marital health/quality will be assessed using five items developed by the research team; (1-5); higher score indicates better outcome
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Intimate partner violence
Intimate partner violence will be assessed using four items adapted from the World Health Organisation study on women's health and domestic violence against women (World Health Organization, 2005); (0-3); higher score indicates worse outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
Financial Stress
Financial stress will be assessed using six items adapted from the Financial Self-Efficacy Scale (Lown, 2012); (0-3); higher score indicates worse outcome.
Time frame: Baseline, 3-5 months post-baseline, 12-15 months post-baseline
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