The impact of a mother-infant intervention on parenting and infant response to challenge: A pilot randomized controlled trial with adolescent mothers in El Salvador.
Jimena ValadesLynne MurrayLaura BozicevicLeonardo L D De PascalisFlorencia BarindelliAlejandra MeglioliPeter CooperPublished in: Infant mental health journal (2021)
A pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) was conducted in El Salvador of an intervention ('Thula Sana') previously shown to enhance maternal sensitivity and infant security of attachment in a South African sample. In El Salvador, trained community workers delivered the intervention from late pregnancy to 6 months postpartum as part of a home-visiting programme. The sample comprised 64 pregnant adolescent women, aged 14-19 years, living in predominantly rural settings. They were randomised to receive either the intervention or normal care. Demographic information was collected at baseline and, immediately post-intervention, blind assessments were made of parental sensitivity and infant emotion regulation. The intervention was found to have a substantial positive impact on maternal sensitivity. Further, compared to control group, infants in the intervention group showed more regulated behaviour: in a social challenge task they showed more attempts to restore communication, and in a non-social challenge task they showed more social and goal-directed behaviour. This replication and extension of the South African findings in a small El Salvador sample shows promise and justifies the conduct of a large-scale RCT in a Central or South American context.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- study protocol
- healthcare
- mental health
- clinical trial
- young adults
- pregnancy outcomes
- systematic review
- open label
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- body mass index
- transcription factor
- physical activity
- machine learning
- chronic pain
- double blind
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- global health