| Literature DB >> 32250274 |
Christie Lm Petrenko1, Jennifer Parr1, Carson Kautz1, Cristiano Tapparello2, Heather Carmichael Olson3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD) affect approximately 2% to 5% of the US population. However, most families are unable to access FASD-informed interventions. Barriers to care include the lack of a knowledgeable and skilled workforce and family-level barriers such as limited financial resources, inability to access childcare, and stigma. As a result, families often try peer-to-peer and self-help support strategies. However, they often take these strategies from disparate sources, which have quite variable intervention quality and empirical support.Entities:
Keywords: children; fetal alcohol spectrum disorders; fetal alcohol syndrome; mHealth; mobile health; parenting; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32250274 PMCID: PMC7171567 DOI: 10.2196/14721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Comparison of features of the standard Families Moving Forward (FMF) Program and FMF Connect mobile health intervention.
| Features | Standard |
|
| Format | In-person; originally tested in families’ homes (but can also be delivered in-clinic or through telehealth) | Mobile health app |
| Target | Parents and caregivers of children (aged 3-12) with FASD or prenatal alcohol exposure | Parents and caregivers of children (aged 3-12) with FASD or prenatal alcohol exposure |
| Materials and delivery | Materials provided by specially trained mental health or child development provider | Materials are self-directed by the caregiver |
| Content division | 14-17 sessions (includes core + optional material) | 12 |
| Duration | 90-min sessions, every other week (can be 60-min weekly sessions) | Self-directed by the caregiver |
| Clinical techniques | ||
| Key treatment processes |
|
|
| Key outcomes | Improve positive cognitive appraisal of child, improve parenting sense of competence, meet unmet family needs, and improve child adaptive function (and reduce problem behaviors) | Improve positive cognitive appraisal of child, improve parenting sense of competence, meet unmet family needs, and improve child adaptive function (and reduce problem behaviors) |
| Routine outcomes monitoring | Progress checklist completed at the start of each session to rate child behavior, self-care, and service barriers | Daily notifications to rate self-care and support, weekly notifications to rate child behavior |
| Social support | Support provided by a specialist, linkages to community or Web support groups |
Figure 1Illustration of the five main components of the Families Moving Forward (FMF) Connect mobile health intervention and their primary functionalities.
Participant demographics.
| Sample characteristics | Value | ||
|
| |||
|
| Adoptive parent | 18 (72) | |
| Grandparent | 5 (20) | ||
| Other relative | 2 (8) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Female | 20 (80) | |
| Male | 5 (20) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Mean (SD) | 51.36 (10.29) | |
| Range | 35-73 | ||
|
| |||
|
| White | 23 (92) | |
| Black/African American | 2 (8) | ||
| Native American/Alaskan Native | 2 (8) | ||
| Hispanic/Latinx | 4 (16) | ||
|
| |||
|
| High school diploma/ General Education Development | 4 (16) | |
| Some college/associates degree | 7 (28) | ||
| Bachelor’s degree | 6 (24) | ||
| Master’s degree | 6 (24) | ||
| Doctoral/professional degree | 2 (8) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Less than 25,000 | 1 (4) | |
| 25,000-34,999 | 4 (16) | ||
| 35,000-49,999 | 1 (4) | ||
| 50,000-74,999 | 4 (16) | ||
| 75,000-99,999 | 3 (12) | ||
|
| Over 100,000 | 9 (36) | |
| Did not answer | 3 (12) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Rural | 3 (12) | |
| Suburban | 20 (80) | ||
| Urban | 2 (8) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Mean (SD) | 8.1 (3.96) | |
| Range | 1-17 | ||
|
| |||
|
| Yes | 10 (40) | |
| No | 15 (60) | ||
|
| |||
|
| Mean (SD) | 5.20 (1.92) | |
| 1 | 1 (4) | ||
| 2, n (%) | 2 (8) | ||
| 3, n (%) | 2 (8) | ||
| 4, n (%) | 4 (16) | ||
| 5, n (%) | 3 (12) | ||
| 6, n (%) | 3 (12) | ||
| 7 | 10 (40) | ||
aNonexclusive categories. No participants identified as Asian, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, or Other.
bSeveral parents also had younger children with a fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, in addition to a child within the study age range.
cFMF: Families Moving Forward.
Participant matrix for global impression themes. Codes in theme cells indicate when participants gave one or more extended utterances (EU) or simple agreement (SA) to comments related to each theme.
| Focus group and participant identification number | Previous FMFa | Ease of access | Guiding/organizing | Connection | Share with others | |
|
| ||||||
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| FG001 | Yes | SAb | EUc | EU | EU |
| FG002 | No | EU | EU | EU | EU | |
| FG003 | Yes | SA | —d | SA | — | |
| FG004 | Yes | EU | EU | EU | EU | |
|
| ||||||
|
| FG005 | Yes | EU | EU | EU | EU |
| FG006e | Yes | SA | EU | EU | EU | |
| FG007e | Yes | SA | SA | EU | SA | |
| FG008 | Yes | EU | EU | EU | SA | |
|
| ||||||
|
| FG009 | No | SA | — | SA | SA |
| FG010 | No | EU | — | EU | EU | |
| FG011 | No | — | — | EU | EU | |
|
| ||||||
|
| FG012e | Yes | EU | EU | EU | EU |
| FG013 | No | EU | EU | EU | SA | |
| FG014 | No | EU | EU | EU | EU | |
|
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|
| FG015 | Yes | EU | EU | EU | EU |
| FG016 | Yes | EU | SA | EU | EU | |
| FG017 | No | EU | EU | — | EU | |
|
| ||||||
|
| FG018e | No | EU | — | SA | EU |
| FG019e | No | EU | — | EU | SA | |
| FG020 | No | SA | — | EU | EU | |
| FG021 | No | SA | — | EU | SA | |
|
| ||||||
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| FG022 | No | EU | — | EU | SA |
| FG023 | No | EU | SA | — | SA | |
| FG024 | No | EU | EU | EU | EU | |
| FG025 | No | SA | EU | — | SA | |
aFMF: standard Families Moving Forward Program.
bSA: Simple agreement, defined as at least one single word (eg, yes, I agree) or nonverbal nod relating to the theme.
cEU: Expanded utterance, defined as at least one multiple word phrase or sentence(s) reflecting the theme.
dDashes indicate a participant did not provide a clear nonverbal or verbal response relating to this theme.
eCaregiver of an adolescent (aged 13-17 years).
Figure 2Primary themes relating to the main individual components of the Families Moving Forward (FMF) Connect mobile health intervention. Themes fell into two main categories: (1) positive features and (2) additional considerations and concerns. The considerations and concerns tended to come up in relation to specific components.
Figure 3Part A of this figure is the icon shown to participants in focus groups. For the latter focus groups, this was shown on a phone simulator. Part B of the figure is the Families Moving Forward (FMF) Connect logo presented to participants.
Figure 4Screenshots of the Learning Modules interface. The first screen is the Learning Modules home page that shows the three levels: (1) Getting Started, (2) Taking Action, and (3) Taking it to the Next Level. The next three screens show the individual modules within each of these three levels.