在 COVID-19 大流行期间实施的数字养育干预对儿童行为和情感问题影响的调节因素:通过封锁体验支持父母和孩子(SPARKLE)随机对照试验数据的二次分析结果》(Supporting Parents and Kids Through Lockdown Experiences (SPARKLE) Randomized Controlled Trial)。

IF 2.1 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Nikola Pokorna, Melanie Palmer, Oliver Pearson, Nicholas Beckley-Hoelscher, James Shearer, Katarzyna Kostyrka-Allchorne, Olly Robertson, Marta Koch, Petr Slovak, Crispin Day, Sarah Byford, Polly Waite, Cathy Creswell, Edmund J S Sonuga-Barke, Kimberley Goldsmith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:我们开发了一款名为 "Parent Positive "的智能手机应用程序,以帮助父母在 COVID-19 大流行期间管理孩子的行为和情绪问题。一项名为 "支持家长和孩子度过封锁期"(SPARKLE)的随机对照试验发现,Parent Positive 能有效减少儿童的情绪问题。然而,应用程序的有效性可能会受到一系列儿童、家庭、社会经济和大流行病相关因素的影响:本研究探讨了与儿童、家庭和社会经济状况相关的基线因素以及与大流行相关的干扰环境是否会调节 Parent Positive 在 1 个月和 2 个月随访期间对儿童行为和情绪问题的影响:本研究是对 SPARKLE 数据的二次探索性分析。数据集包括 646 名儿童(4-10 岁),他们的父母被随机分配到 "家长积极行动 "项目(320 人)或常规随访项目(326 人)。候选基线调节因素包括儿童年龄、性别、注意力缺陷/多动障碍症状、父母心理困扰、家庭冲突、家庭收入、就业状况、家庭拥挤程度以及与大流行相关的干扰风险(即家庭教育、封锁状态和隔离状态)。采用线性混合效应协方差分析模型对随机化后 1 个月(T2)和 2 个月(T3)的儿童行为和情绪问题结果进行了分析,并对基线(T1)结果进行了调整,同时纳入了干预措施和干预措施与时间点的交互项,以考虑两个时间点的不同效果。将干预与时间的交互项替换为干预与时间点、干预与基线调节因子的交互项,以评估基线因素对干预效果的调节作用:儿童性别是 "家长积极干预 "与 "照常随访 "对情绪问题影响的一个重要调节因子(B=0.72,95% CI 0.12-1.33;P=0.02)。具体而言,"家长积极应对法 "的影响接近显著(T2:B=-0.41,95% CI -0.82-0.0004;P=.05)或显著(T3:B=-0.76,95% CI -1.22 -0.30;PC结论:本研究强调了 "父母积极法 "在有效减少不同家庭中小学适龄男童情绪问题方面的潜力。然而,由于家庭人口背景的差异性有限,因此需要谨慎解释,而且有必要在不同样本中进行重复研究,并延长随访时间:试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04786080;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04786080。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Moderators of the Effects of a Digital Parenting Intervention on Child Conduct and Emotional Problems Implemented During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Results From a Secondary Analysis of Data From the Supporting Parents and Kids Through Lockdown Experiences (SPARKLE) Randomized Controlled Trial.

Background: A smartphone app, Parent Positive, was developed to help parents manage their children's conduct and emotional problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. A randomized controlled trial, Supporting Parents and Kids Through Lockdown Experiences (SPARKLE), found Parent Positive to be effective in reducing children's emotional problems. However, app effectiveness may be influenced by a range of child, family, socioeconomic, and pandemic-related factors.

Objective: This study examined whether baseline factors related to the child, family, and socioeconomic status, as well as pandemic-related disruption circumstances, moderated Parent Positive's effects on child conduct and emotional problems at 1- and 2-month follow-up.

Methods: This study was a secondary exploratory analysis of SPARKLE data. The data set included 646 children (4-10 years of age) with parents randomized to either Parent Positive (n=320) or follow-up as usual (n=326). Candidate baseline moderators included child age, gender, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms, parental psychological distress, family conflict, household income, employment status, household overcrowding, and pandemic-related disruption risk (ie, homeschooling, lockdown status, and isolation status). Child conduct and emotional problem outcomes measured at 1- (T2) and 2-months (T3) post randomization were analyzed using linear mixed-effects analysis of covariance models adjusting for baseline (T1) measure of outcome and including intervention and intervention by time point interaction terms allowing for different effects at the 2 time points. Moderation of intervention effects by baseline factors was assessed by replacing the intervention by time interaction terms with intervention by time point by baseline moderator interaction terms.

Results: Child gender was a significant moderator of the Parent Positive versus follow-up as usual effect on emotional problems (B=0.72, 95% CI 0.12-1.33; P=.02). Specifically, the effect of Parent Positive was close to significant (T2: B=-0.41, 95% CI -0.82 to 0.0004; P=.05) or significant (T3: B=-0.76, 95% CI -1.22 to -0.30; P<.001) in males only when compared with females, and males experienced a significantly larger reduction in emotional problems than females in the Parent Positive arm at the 2-month post randomization time point. None of the other investigated baseline factors moderated effects on emotional problems, and no factors moderated effects on conduct problems.

Conclusions: This study highlights Parent Positive's potential for effectively reducing emotional problems in primary school-aged male children across a wide range of families. However, due to limited variability in the demographic background of the families, cautious interpretation is required, and replications are necessary in diverse samples with longer follow-up times.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04786080; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04786080.

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来源期刊
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting
JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
5.40%
发文量
62
审稿时长
12 weeks
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