Cradling Our Future Through Family Strengthening Study
Substance Abuse, Post-partum Depression, Depression
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Substance Abuse focused on measuring Native American health, Teen pregnancy, Family strengthening, Substance abuse prevention, Injury prevention
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Pregnant AI females aged 12 to 19 years old at time of conception.
- Gestational age of 28 weeks or less (in order to complete intervention prior to delivery).
- Parent/guardian consent for youth under 18 years old.
- Reside within 1-hour transportation range (50 miles) of the local Indian Health Service medical facility.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Current participation in other mental or behavior health research project.
- Factors that preclude full participation, identified at baseline and after caseness review, including: unstable and severe medical, psychiatric or drug use problem; acute suicidal or homicidal ideation requiring immediate intervention; recent, severe stressful life event such as physical or sexual abuse, or victim of a violent crime that requires specific and high intensity intervention or out of home placement; or chronic pattern of unstable caretakers or living situation.
Sites / Locations
- Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
- Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
- Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
- Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
- Johns Hopkins Center for American Indian Health
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Family Spirit Intervention
Optimized Standard Care Control Group
The Family Spirit Intervention included 43 structured lessons and followed a culturally congruent format. Positive parenting lessons were focused on reducing behaviors (i.e., poor monitoring; coercive interactions;harsh, unresponsive, or rejecting parenting; and abuse/ neglect) associated with early childhood behavior problems, including externalizing, internalizing, and dysregulation problems.
Optimized standard care consisted of transportation to recommended prenatal and well-baby clinic visits, pamphlets about child care and community resources, and referrals to local services. It also addressed access barriers to health care for young mothers and children, and it overcame concerns that home-visiting programs have operated in parallel, not in partnership, with pediatric care. Family health liaisons conducted the optimized standard care and were not trained in the Family Spirit intervention, to avoid contamination of the control condition.