Julion Wrenetha A, Sumo Jen'nea, Bounds Dawn T, Breitenstein Susan M, Schoeny Michael, Gross Deborah, Fogg Louis
Rush University Medical Center, Rush University College of Nursing, 600 S. Paulina Suite 1080, Chicago IL, 60608, United States.
Rush University Medical Center, Rush University College of Nursing, 600 S. Paulina Suite 1080, Chicago IL, 60608, United States.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2016 Jul;49:29-39. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2016.05.005. Epub 2016 May 28.
African American (AA) fathers who live apart from their children face multiple obstacles to consistent and positive involvement with their children. Consequently, significant numbers of children are bereft of their father's positive involvement. Intervention research that is explicitly focused on promoting the positive involvement of non-resident AA fathers with their young children is limited. The purpose of this article is to describe the study protocol of a randomized trial (RCT) designed to test the Building Bridges to Fatherhood program against a financial literacy comparison condition; and discuss early implementation challenges.
Fathers (n=180) are recruited to attend 10 group meetings, reimbursed for transportation, given dinner and activity vouchers for spending time with their child, and incentivized with a $40 gift card at each data collection time point. Mothers are incentivized ($40 gift card) at data collection and must be amenable to father child interaction. Intervention targets include father psychological well-being, parenting competence, communication, problem-solving ability; father-mother relationship quality; and child behavioral and emotional/social development.
To date, 57 fathers have been randomized to study condition. Recruitment has been influenced by father and mother hesitancy and the logistics of reaching and maintaining contact with participants. Strategies to surmount challenges to father and mother recruitment and engagement have been developed.
The prospective benefits of positive father involvement to children, fathers and families outweigh the challenges associated with community-based intervention research. The findings from this RCT can inform the body of knowledge on engaging AA non-resident fathers in culturally relevant fatherhood programming.
与子女分居的非裔美国(AA)父亲在持续积极参与子女生活方面面临多重障碍。因此,大量儿童缺失了父亲的积极陪伴。专门致力于促进非居住型AA父亲积极参与其年幼儿女生活的干预研究十分有限。本文旨在描述一项随机对照试验(RCT)的研究方案,该试验旨在将“搭建通往父亲角色的桥梁”项目与金融知识普及对照条件进行对比测试;并讨论早期实施过程中遇到的挑战。
招募了180名父亲参加10次小组会议,为其交通费用提供报销,为他们提供与孩子共度时光的晚餐和活动代金券,并在每个数据收集时间点用一张40美元的礼品卡作为激励。母亲们在数据收集时会得到激励(一张40美元的礼品卡),并且必须愿意配合父亲与孩子的互动。干预目标包括父亲的心理健康、育儿能力、沟通能力、解决问题的能力;父母关系质量;以及孩子的行为和情感/社交发展。
迄今为止,已有57名父亲被随机分配到研究组。招募工作受到父亲和母亲的犹豫态度以及与参与者取得联系并保持接触的后勤工作的影响。已经制定了克服父亲和母亲招募及参与方面挑战的策略。
父亲积极参与对孩子、父亲和家庭的潜在益处超过了基于社区的干预研究带来的挑战。这项随机对照试验的结果可以为有关让非居住型AA父亲参与具有文化相关性的父亲角色项目的知识体系提供参考。