Courageous Parents, Courageous Children
Anxiety DisorderAnxiety disorders usually start in childhood and adolescence and are associated with social and occupational difficulties in adulthood. Children who have a parent with an anxiety disorder and who find new situations distressing and avoid them are at an increased risk for developing an anxiety disorder. Research suggests that anti-anxiety parenting can help children grow up courageous and calm. It is, however, difficult to parent in an anti-anxiety way when the parent has an anxiety disorder himself or herself.
This research study will test the efficacy of a new program designed to prevent the onset or persistence of anxiety disorders in children at risk for anxiety disorders. The investigators will first help parents learn skills to cope with their own anxiety and then coach them to share these skills with their children and parent in an anti-anxiety way. The goal is to intervene early enough in the children's lives so that they can be free of anxiety disorders and lead happy, healthy and productive lives in adulthood.
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Conditions de participation
-
Sexe:
ALL -
Âges admissibles:
0 and up
Critères de participation
Parents:
Inclusion criteria:
Parents will be included if they have a current diagnosis of at least one anxiety disorder, one or more children between the ages two and eight years in their own care, capacity to provide informed consent, and ability to speak English well enough to benefit from the intervention.
Exclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria for parents are receipt of an adequate course (6 or more sessions) of structured psychological therapy in the past 12 months, or plans to move out of Nova Scotia within the next three years. We will include parents with co-morbid mood disorders. However, those whose mood disorder is the primary complaint will be referred for treatment for their mood before being re-assessed. We will exclude parents with disorders that would interfere with the standard treatment protocol delivery; these include lifetime schizophrenia, autism, intellectual disability and current drug and alcohol use disorder.
Offspring:
Inclusion criteria:
Children are eligible if they are aged two to eight and if they have a score of inhibited temperament (negative emotionality) one standard deviation or more above the mean of an age-matched normative sample on the Laboratory Assessment of Temperament.
Exclusion criteria:
Those with lifetime schizophrenia, autism, general intellectual disability, and current drug and alcohol addiction will be excluded, as these conditions would impact on the standard delivery of the parenting intervention. We will exclude children currently receiving treatment for anxiety.
Lieu de l'étude
Nova Scotia Health
Nova Scotia HealthHalifax, Nova Scotia
Canada
Contactez l'équipe d'étude
- Étude parrainée par
- Nova Scotia Health Authority
- Participants recherchés
- Plus d'informations
- ID de l'étude:
NCT03224845