The Parents under Pressure parenting programme for families with fathers receiving treatment for opioid dependence: the PuP4Dads feasibility study

A. Whittaker, L. Elliott, Julie Taylor, S. Dawe, P. Harnett, A. Stoddart, P. Littlewood, R. Robertson, B. Farquharson, H. Strachan
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However, opioid-dependent fathers have been largely ignored in parenting research.\n \n \n \n To implement and test the feasibility and acceptability of the Parents under Pressure programme (PuP4Dads) for opioid-dependent fathers and their families, and to determine whether or not a full-scale evaluation could be conducted.\n \n \n \n A mixed-methods feasibility study.\n \n \n \n Two non-NHS family support services for parents who use drugs in Scotland.\n \n \n \n Fathers prescribed opioid substitution therapy (n = 25), their partners (n = 17) and children, as well as practitioners, supervisors, service managers and referrers.\n \n \n \n A home-visiting programme, including an integrated theoretical framework, case formulation, collaborative goal-setting and modules designed to improve parenting, the caregiving environment and child welfare. The programme was delivered flexibly over 6 months by accredited practitioners.\n \n \n \n Feasibility progression criteria included the recruitment target (n = 24 fathers), acceptability of PuP4Dads, father engagement in the study (including a minimum of 66% of fathers completing PuP and a minimum of 10 fathers completing baseline and post-treatment research interviews), engagement in qualitative interviews (including a minimum of 10 fathers and 90% practitioner uptake and 80% manager uptake), focus groups (with a minimum of 80% referrer uptake), adequate fidelity and no adverse events.\n \n \n \n The following researcher-administered validated questionnaires were used: the Brief Child Abuse Potential Inventory, the Parenting Sense of Competence Scale, the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, the Paternal Antenatal Attachment Scale, the Maternal Antenatal Attachment Scale, the Emotional Availability Scale, the Brief Infant Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment, the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, the Conflict Tactics Scale, Treatment Outcome Profile and the EuroQol-5 Dimensions, five-level version. Other sources included parent-completed service use (an economic measure), social work child protection data, NHS opioid substitution therapy prescription data and practitioner-reported attendance data. We also conducted interviews with fathers (n = 23), mothers (n = 14), practitioners (n = 8), supervisors (n = 2) and service managers (n = 7); conducted focus groups with referrers (n = 28); and held an ‘expert event’ with stakeholders (n = 39).\n \n \n \n \n The PuP4Dads was successfully delivered within non-NHS settings and was considered acceptable and suitable for the study population. Referrals (n = 44) resulted in 38 (86%) eligible fathers, of whom 25 (66%) fathers and 17 partners/mothers consented to participate. Most fathers reported no previous parenting support. A total of 248 sessions was delivered to the 20 fathers and 14 mothers who started the intervention. Fourteen fathers (and 10 mothers) completed ≥ 6 sessions and six fathers (and four mothers) completed ≤ 5 sessions. Father and mother attendance rates were equal (mean 71%). Median length of engagement for fathers was 26 weeks and for mothers it was 30 weeks. Twenty-three fathers completed interviews at baseline, 16 fathers completed interviews at follow-up 1 and 13 fathers completed interviews at follow-up 2. Outcome measures were well tolerated; however, the suitability of some measures was dependent on family circumstances. The researcher-administered questionnaires had few missing data. The perceived benefits of PuP4Dads reported by parents, practitioners and managers included the following: the therapeutic focus on fathers improved parental emotion regulation, there was improved understanding and responding to child’s needs, there was better multiagency working and the programme was a good fit with practice ‘ethos’ and policy agenda. Learning highlighted the importance of service-wide adoption and implementation support, strategies to improve recruitment and retention of fathers, managing complex needs of both parents concurrently, understanding contextual factors affecting programme delivery and variables affecting intervention engagement and outcomes.\n \n \n \n Lack of emotional availability and economic (service use) data.\n \n \n \n A larger evaluation of PuP4Dads is feasible.\n \n \n \n Further work is required to demonstrate the effectiveness of PuP4Dads and the cost implications. A better understanding is needed of how the intervention works, for whom, under what circumstances and why.\n \n \n \n Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN43209618.\n \n \n \n This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 10, No. 3. 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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The impact of parental drug use on children is a major public health problem. However, opioid-dependent fathers have been largely ignored in parenting research. To implement and test the feasibility and acceptability of the Parents under Pressure programme (PuP4Dads) for opioid-dependent fathers and their families, and to determine whether or not a full-scale evaluation could be conducted. A mixed-methods feasibility study. Two non-NHS family support services for parents who use drugs in Scotland. Fathers prescribed opioid substitution therapy (n = 25), their partners (n = 17) and children, as well as practitioners, supervisors, service managers and referrers. A home-visiting programme, including an integrated theoretical framework, case formulation, collaborative goal-setting and modules designed to improve parenting, the caregiving environment and child welfare. The programme was delivered flexibly over 6 months by accredited practitioners. Feasibility progression criteria included the recruitment target (n = 24 fathers), acceptability of PuP4Dads, father engagement in the study (including a minimum of 66% of fathers completing PuP and a minimum of 10 fathers completing baseline and post-treatment research interviews), engagement in qualitative interviews (including a minimum of 10 fathers and 90% practitioner uptake and 80% manager uptake), focus groups (with a minimum of 80% referrer uptake), adequate fidelity and no adverse events. The following researcher-administered validated questionnaires were used: the Brief Child Abuse Potential Inventory, the Parenting Sense of Competence Scale, the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale, the Paternal Antenatal Attachment Scale, the Maternal Antenatal Attachment Scale, the Emotional Availability Scale, the Brief Infant Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment, the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, the Conflict Tactics Scale, Treatment Outcome Profile and the EuroQol-5 Dimensions, five-level version. Other sources included parent-completed service use (an economic measure), social work child protection data, NHS opioid substitution therapy prescription data and practitioner-reported attendance data. We also conducted interviews with fathers (n = 23), mothers (n = 14), practitioners (n = 8), supervisors (n = 2) and service managers (n = 7); conducted focus groups with referrers (n = 28); and held an ‘expert event’ with stakeholders (n = 39). The PuP4Dads was successfully delivered within non-NHS settings and was considered acceptable and suitable for the study population. Referrals (n = 44) resulted in 38 (86%) eligible fathers, of whom 25 (66%) fathers and 17 partners/mothers consented to participate. Most fathers reported no previous parenting support. A total of 248 sessions was delivered to the 20 fathers and 14 mothers who started the intervention. Fourteen fathers (and 10 mothers) completed ≥ 6 sessions and six fathers (and four mothers) completed ≤ 5 sessions. Father and mother attendance rates were equal (mean 71%). Median length of engagement for fathers was 26 weeks and for mothers it was 30 weeks. Twenty-three fathers completed interviews at baseline, 16 fathers completed interviews at follow-up 1 and 13 fathers completed interviews at follow-up 2. Outcome measures were well tolerated; however, the suitability of some measures was dependent on family circumstances. The researcher-administered questionnaires had few missing data. The perceived benefits of PuP4Dads reported by parents, practitioners and managers included the following: the therapeutic focus on fathers improved parental emotion regulation, there was improved understanding and responding to child’s needs, there was better multiagency working and the programme was a good fit with practice ‘ethos’ and policy agenda. Learning highlighted the importance of service-wide adoption and implementation support, strategies to improve recruitment and retention of fathers, managing complex needs of both parents concurrently, understanding contextual factors affecting programme delivery and variables affecting intervention engagement and outcomes. Lack of emotional availability and economic (service use) data. A larger evaluation of PuP4Dads is feasible. Further work is required to demonstrate the effectiveness of PuP4Dads and the cost implications. A better understanding is needed of how the intervention works, for whom, under what circumstances and why. Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN43209618. This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 10, No. 3. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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父亲接受阿片类药物依赖治疗的家庭的“压力下的父母养育计划”:PuP4Dads可行性研究
父母吸毒对儿童的影响是一个重大的公共卫生问题。然而,依赖阿片类药物的父亲在育儿研究中基本上被忽视了。为阿片类药物依赖的父亲及其家庭实施和测试压力下的父母计划(PuP4Dads)的可行性和可接受性,并确定是否可以进行全面评估。混合方法可行性研究。为苏格兰吸毒父母提供的两项非nhs家庭支持服务。父亲开了阿片类药物替代疗法(n = 25),他们的伴侣(n = 17)和孩子,以及从业人员、主管、服务经理和转诊者。一项家访计划,包括综合的理论框架、个案编制、合作设定目标和旨在改善养育、照顾环境和儿童福利的单元。该课程由认可的执业医师在6个月内灵活授课。可行性进展标准包括招募目标(n = 24名父亲)、PuP4Dads的可接受性、父亲参与研究(包括至少66%的父亲完成PuP,至少10名父亲完成基线和治疗后研究访谈)、参与定性访谈(包括至少10名父亲,90%的从业者接受,80%的管理者接受)、焦点小组(至少80%的转诊者接受)、足够的保真度和无不良事件。使用了以下研究者管理的有效问卷:《儿童虐待潜力简易量表》、《父母能力感量表》、《情绪调节困难量表》、《父亲产前依恋量表》、《母亲产前依恋量表》、《情绪可得性量表》、《婴幼儿社交与情绪简易评估》、《优势与困难问卷》、《冲突策略量表》、《治疗结果简介》和《EuroQol-5量表》五层次版本。其他来源包括父母完成的服务使用(一项经济措施)、社会工作儿童保护数据、NHS阿片类药物替代治疗处方数据和医生报告的出勤数据。我们还对父亲(n = 23)、母亲(n = 14)、从业人员(n = 8)、主管(n = 2)和服务经理(n = 7)进行了访谈;与推荐人进行焦点小组(n = 28);并与利益相关者举行了一次“专家活动”(n = 39)。PuP4Dads在非nhs环境下成功交付,被认为是可接受的,适合研究人群。经推荐(n = 44),有38位(86%)符合条件的父亲,其中25位(66%)父亲和17位伴侣/母亲同意参与。大多数父亲报告说,他们以前没有接受过育儿方面的支持。开始干预的20位父亲和14位母亲共接受了248次治疗。14位父亲(10位母亲)完成≥6次治疗,6位父亲(4位母亲)完成≤5次治疗。父亲和母亲的出勤率相等(平均71%)。父亲的平均订婚时间为26周,母亲为30周。23名父亲在基线时完成访谈,16名父亲在随访1时完成访谈13名父亲在随访2时完成访谈。结果测量耐受性良好;但是,有些措施是否适当取决于家庭情况。研究人员管理的问卷几乎没有丢失数据。家长、从业人员和管理人员报告说,PuP4Dads的好处包括以下几点:对父亲的治疗重点改善了父母的情绪调节,提高了对孩子需求的理解和反应,有更好的多机构工作,该计划与实践的“精神”和政策议程非常契合。学习强调了在整个服务范围内采用和实施支持、改善招募和留住父亲的战略、同时管理父母双方的复杂需求、了解影响方案实施的背景因素以及影响干预参与和结果的变量的重要性。缺乏情感可用性和经济(服务使用)数据。对PuP4Dads进行更大的评估是可行的。需要进一步的工作来证明PuP4Dads的有效性和成本影响。我们需要更好地了解干预是如何起作用的,对谁起作用,在什么情况下以及为什么起作用。当前对照试验ISRCTN43209618。该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)公共卫生研究方案资助,将全文发表在《公共卫生研究》上;第10卷第3期请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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