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Evaluating the EPaS 2014 programme and an e-version of the Little Parent Handbook

Evaluating the EPaS 2014 programme and an e-version of the Little Parent Handbook. Margiad Elen Williams CEBEI, Bangor University. Content. Study 1: EPaS 2014 project Background Proposed research project Study 2: e-version of Little Parent Handbook Background Proposed research project.

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Evaluating the EPaS 2014 programme and an e-version of the Little Parent Handbook

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  1. Evaluating the EPaS 2014 programme and an e-version of the Little Parent Handbook Margiad Elen Williams CEBEI, Bangor University

  2. Content • Study 1: EPaS 2014 project • Background • Proposed research project • Study 2: e-version of Little Parent Handbook • Background • Proposed research project

  3. Enhancing Parenting Skills (EPaS) • Developed in 1990s • Three core components: • Structured assessment of child behaviour, family circumstances and assets • Case analysis • Intervention strategies

  4. Intensive Treatment trial • Intervention with CAMHS-referred children • Compared to Standard CAMHS management advice • Significant improvements child behaviour, maternal depression, positive parenting skills • Maintained at 4-year follow-up • See Hutchings et al. (2002, 2004)

  5. Health visitor training • Adapted for health visitors • 24 health visitors, 36 families (24 I & 12 C) • 12 weekly two-hour training sessions for HVs • Significant improvements child behaviour & parental mental health • Increased knowledge & use of behaviour principles • High levels satisfaction • See Lane & Hutchings (2002)

  6. Waterloo Foundation grant – to evaluate a shorter version of the EPaS training delivered across Wales Rationale: the original EPaS course was not designed in a format for wide-scale dissemination • Training for staff working with children facing developmental challenges • Underlying principles work for all children • Re-designed programme • Two-day training course • Detailed intervention manual • Parent help sheets

  7. Waterloo Foundation study • Five locations across Wales • 62 attended day 1 (assessment) • 42 attended day 2 (case analysis & intervention strategies) • High levels of satisfaction with training & content • Increased use of behaviour principles

  8. Waterloo Foundation study • Data from 25 families (10 complete) • Children with behaviour problems, parents with low mental well-being and problematic parenting skills • Significant improvements in child behaviour, parental mental well-being, and parenting skills • Parents rated programme as useful and would recommend to others

  9. Limitations • Two days not enough • Staff had varied backgrounds & experience • Small sample • No control comparison group

  10. EPaS 2014 trial • Aims to address limitations • Course redesigned to be delivered in three days and manual improved and expanded (based on feedback form Waterloo trial) • Day 1 – assessment • Day 2 – case analysis • Day 3 – intervention strategies • Tailored to support health visitors who already have good child development understanding (as with initial EPaS training).

  11. EPaS 2014 trial • Hypotheses • Three days of detailed assessment, case analysis and behavioural intervention skills training will enable HVs to effectively support families of high challenge pre-school children and achieve positive outcomes. • This will demonstrate a scalable model for dissemination of effective training for HVs in core behavioural case planning and intervention strategies

  12. EPaS 2014 trial • Multi-centre randomised controlled trial • Recruit 60 health visitors • Screen for child behaviour problems in children aged 30 – 48 months (above clinical cut-off ECBI) • Recruit two families each (n=120) • Baseline, 4-month FU, 8-month FU (intervention only) • Child behaviour, parental mental health, parenting skills, child language skills, observation parent-child interaction

  13. Little Parent Handbook • Booklet for parents introducing effective core parenting skills • Covers variety of behaviours problems • Based on parent help sheets from the Waterloo Foundation project • Published November 2013

  14. Why web-based version? • Group-based programmes inappropriate and/or inaccessible to some • One-to-one support is resource intensive and not accessible to all parents • 83% of UK households have internet access (ONS, 2013) • 70% of people own smartphone with internet access

  15. Web-based trial • Aim to develop and evaluate a web-based version • Weekly chapters, worksheets, video vignettes, quizzes with feedback • Randomised controlled trial • Health visitors to recruit families • Target parents of children at-risk of behaviour problems (aged 3 – 8 years)

  16. Thank you for listening Email: margiad.williams@bangor.ac.uk Tel: 01248 383 627

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