Overview
Background: Interactions between parents and children with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) tend to be directive and didactic lacking in playfulness and enjoyment. Recent research has shown that parents of children with IDD who engage in more playful, creative, and enjoyable interactions tend to foster more positive relationships with their children. Early interventions have been shown to enhance parent-child interactions and promote cognitive and socio-emotional development in children with IDD.
Objectives: This mixed-methods randomized controlled trial (RCT) study aims to develop a manualized dyadic Creative-Art-Therapies (CAT)-based intervention for children with IDD and their mothers and assess and explore its effects on the quality of the mother-child interaction and relationship.
Methods: This mixed-methods RCT will investigate and compare two conditions: experimental dyadic CAT-based intervention for children with IDD and their mothers and control psycho-educational counseling intended for mothers only. The sample will consist of sixty dyads of children with IDD between the ages of 3-7 and their mothers, who will be randomly assigned either to experimental or control condition. The experimental group (n=30) will receive 8 weekly individual dyadic CAT-based intervention meetings at their homes and involve both the child and the mother, and the control group (n=30) will receive 8 weekly individual psycho-educational counseling meetings online via Zoom and involve the mother only.
Description
- Background
Play is crucial to children's development and establishing positive parent-child relationships. Children with IDD face substantial developmental delays that often impact their play behaviors, inclining them toward solitary and repetitive play activities while reducing their social interactions. Interactions between parents and children with IDD tend to be directive and didactic lacking in playfulness and enjoyment. Parents of children with IDD who engage in more playful, creative, and enjoyable interactions tend to foster more positive relationships with their children. Early interventions have been shown to enhance parent-child interactions and promote cognitive and socio-emotional development in children with IDD. Thus, this novel intervention may benefit children with IDD and their mothers' interactions and relationships, as well as the children's socio-emotional development and the mothers' well-being. The investigators will develop the dyadic play intervention as part of the study while examining feasibility and intervention fidelity.
Objectives: The objectives of this mixed-methods RCT study are: 1) To develop a manualized dyadic CAT-based intervention for children with IDD and their mothers. 2) To measure the effectiveness of the dyadic CAT-based intervention in improving the quality of the mother-child interaction and increasing the mother's and child's playfulness. 3) To explore the mothers' experience within the intervention and its effect on their playfulness, interactions with their children, and the quality of their relationships.
Methods: A mixed-methods approach will be applied, where quantitative and qualitative data are collected and analyzed in parallel.
Participants: The sample will be composed of 60 dyads of children between the ages of 3-7 diagnosed with IDD and their mothers.
Study Design and Procedures: This is a two-arm RCT that will allocate the participating dyads to one of two conditions: experimental arm of dyadic CAT-based intervention or control arm of psycho-educational parent counseling. All mother-child dyads will participate in a baseline assessment meeting (one week before the first intervention meeting) and a final assessment meeting (one week after the last intervention meeting), each meeting lasting approximately 45 minutes. The assessment meetings will measure the quality of the interactions between children with IDD and their mothers and will be video-recorded.
The experimental arm of dyadic CAT-based dyadic intervention will include eight individual weekly sessions of a mother and a child with a music or drama therapist in their home environment, each session lasting approximately 45 minutes. The intervention will aim to facilitate mutual free-play interactions, promote enjoyment and fun, and enhance the parents' and children's playfulness. The dyadic play intervention will be based on the Creative Arts Therapies as they offer a unique approach to cultivating playfulness, creativity, and self-expression, while employing non-verbal and multi-sensorial techniques, especially suited to the cognitive and verbal skills of children with IDD. As a part of this study, a novel intervention treatment guide will be developed and specifically tailored for the studied population.
The control arm of psycho-educational parent counseling will include eight individual weekly sessions of a mother and a parent counselor, each session lasting approximately 45 minutes. The psycho-educational parent counseling will be performed online via Zoom.
Behavioral tasks and semi-structured interviews will be conducted. Quantitative data will include observational measures of emotional availability (EA), parent-child interpersonal synchrony (IPS), parent's playfulness (via Parent Playfulness scales), and child's playfulness (via Test of Playfulness). Each measure will be collected for each dyad during the assessment meetings at two points of time: before and after the intervention period.
Qualitative data will include interviews with 35% of the mothers who will participate in the dyadic CAT-based intervention, and will be collected following the final assessment meeting and two months after the intervention ends.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
- Children between the age of 3-7
- Children with a prior diagnosis of IDD, or studying in special education nursery schools for children with developmental delays
- The children's mothers
Exclusion Criteria:
- Children with additional primary diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder or cerebral palsy
- Children with additional diagnosis of severe physical disability or serious movement limitations
- Children with additional diagnosis of sensory disorders such as blindness or deafness