Betancourt Theresa S, Ng Lauren C, Kirk Catherine M, Brennan Robert T, Beardslee William R, Stulac Sara, Mushashi Christine, Nduwimana Estella, Mukunzi Sylvere, Nyirandagijimana Beatha, Kalisa Godfrey, Rwabukwisi Cyamatare F, Sezibera Vincent
Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2017 Aug;58(8):922-930. doi: 10.1111/jcpp.12729. Epub 2017 May 15.
Children affected by HIV are at risk for poor mental health. We conducted a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of the Family Strengthening Intervention (FSI-HIV), a family home-visiting intervention to promote mental health and improve parent-child relationships in families with caregivers living with HIV, hypothesizing that child and family outcomes would be superior to usual care social work services.
Eighty two families (N = 170 children, 48.24% female; N = 123 caregivers, 68.29% female) with at least one HIV-positive caregiver (n = 103, 83.74%) and school-aged child (ages 7-17) (HIV+ n = 21, 12.35%) were randomized to receive FSI-HIV or treatment-as-usual (TAU). Local research assistants blind to treatment conducted assessments of child mental health, parenting practices, and family functioning at baseline, post-intervention, and 3-month follow-up. Multilevel modeling assessed effects of FSI-HIV on outcomes across three time points.
NCT01509573, 'Pilot Feasibility Trial of the Family Strengthening Intervention in Rwanda (FSI-HIV-R).' https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/;NCT01509573?term=Pilot+Feasibility+Trial+of+the+Family+Strengthening+Intervention+in+Rwanda+%28FSI-HIV-R%29&rank=1.
At 3-month follow-up, children in FSI-HIV showed fewer symptoms of depression compared to TAU by both self-report (β = -.246; p = .009) and parent report (β = -.174; p = .035) but there were no significant differences by group on conduct problems, functional impairment, family connectedness, or parenting.
Family-based prevention has promise for reducing depression symptoms in children affected by HIV. Future trials should examine the effects of FSI-HIV over time in trials powered to examine treatment mediators.
感染艾滋病毒的儿童存在心理健康状况不佳的风险。我们开展了一项关于家庭强化干预(FSI-HIV)的试点随机对照试验(RCT),这是一项家庭家访干预措施,旨在促进感染艾滋病毒的照料者家庭中的心理健康并改善亲子关系,我们假设儿童和家庭的干预效果将优于常规护理社会工作服务。
82个家庭(N = 170名儿童,48.24%为女性;N = 123名照料者,68.29%为女性),其中至少有一名艾滋病毒呈阳性的照料者(n = 103,83.74%)和学龄儿童(7至17岁)(艾滋病毒呈阳性的n = 21,12.35%)被随机分配接受FSI-HIV或常规治疗(TAU)。对治疗不知情的当地研究助理在基线、干预后和3个月随访时对儿童心理健康、养育方式和家庭功能进行评估。多水平模型评估了FSI-HIV在三个时间点对干预效果的影响。
NCT01509573,“卢旺达家庭强化干预(FSI-HIV-R)的试点可行性试验”。https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/;NCT01509573?term=Pilot+Feasibility+Trial+of+the+Family+Strengthening+Intervention+in+Rwanda+%28FSI-HIV-R%29&rank=1。
在3个月随访时,通过自我报告(β = -0.246;p = 0.009)和家长报告(β = -0.174;p = 0.035)发现,接受FSI-HIV干预的儿童与接受常规治疗的儿童相比,抑郁症状更少,但两组在行为问题、功能损害、家庭亲密度或养育方式方面没有显著差异。
基于家庭的预防措施有望减少感染艾滋病毒儿童的抑郁症状。未来的试验应在有足够能力检验治疗中介因素的试验中,研究FSI-HIV随时间的干预效果。