| Literature DB >> 21208451 |
Jordana K Bayer1, Ronald M Rapee, Harriet Hiscock, Obioha C Ukoumunne, Cathrine Mihalopoulos, Susan Clifford, Melissa Wake.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization predicts that by 2030 internalising problems (e.g. depression and anxiety) will be second only to HIV/AIDS in international burden of disease. Internalising problems affect 1 in 7 school aged children, impacting on peer relations, school engagement, and later mental health, relationships and employment. The development of early childhood prevention for internalising problems is in its infancy. The current study follows two successful 'efficacy' trials of a parenting group intervention to reduce internalising disorders in temperamentally inhibited preschool children. Cool Little Kids is a population-level randomised trial to determine the impacts of systematically screening preschoolers for inhibition then offering a parenting group intervention, on child internalising problems and economic costs at school entry. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21208451 PMCID: PMC3027133 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-11
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Graphical depiction of components of the trial.
Measures used in analysis of study outcomes
| Construct | Measure | Administration time points | Number of items | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temperamental inhibition | Short Temperament Scales - Inhibition subscale [ | Screening | 7 | Children who score ≥85th percentile are eligible for the trial. |
| Major health or developmental diagnoses | Parents' Evaluation of Developmental Status (Australian version)[ | RCT baseline | 10 | Children with major diagnoses will be excluded: determined on a case-by-case basis. |
| Behavioural and emotional problems | Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaire (4-10 year old Australian version)[ | Screening | 25 | Behavioural screening measure; widely used in population health research; existing school-entry screen in Victoria. Emotional subscale may have concurrent validity with temperamental inhibition screen. Secondary outcome (impact on externalising/conduct problems). |
| Anxiety diagnoses | Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV, Child Version, Parent Interview Schedule (ADIS-CP-IV) [ | 1 & 2 years | Primary outcome. Conducted by telephone interview. | |
| Internalising problems | Children's Moods, Fears and Worries Questionnaire [ | 1 & 2 years | 34-38 | Primary outcome. Detailed measure of internalising symptoms (anxious, fearful, withdrawn, depressive) in young children. |
| Anxiety problems | Preschool Anxiety Scale - Revised (PAS-R)[ | 1 & 2 years | 28 | Primary outcome. Detailed measure of anxiety symptoms in young children. Sensitive to intervention in |
| Parenting practices | Parent Behavior Checklist (nurturing, harsh discipline) [ | Baseline | 32 | Secondary outcome (intervention mechanism for impacting on child). |
| Mental health | Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scale [ | Baseline | 21 | Secondary outcome (impact on parent wellbeing). |
| Wellbeing | SF-12 [ | Baseline | 12 | Secondary outcome (economics measure). |
| Assessment of Quality of Life (AQoL-8D) [ | 1 & 2 years | 35 | Secondary outcome (economics measure). | |
| Fidelity | Group sessions content checklists, rated by facilitator and researcher | 6 month appraisal | 6-8 | Secondary outcome (integrity of intervention delivery). Adapted for this study. |
| Acceptability to parents | Perceptions of screening process | 6 month appraisal | 4 | Secondary outcome (implications for translation/dissemination uptake by families). Adapted for this study. |
| Cost-effectiveness | Child and adult health service use | 1 & 2 years | 6 | Secondary outcome (for policy/decision makers considering translation/dissemination). Generated for this study. |