RecruitingACTRN12624000904572

Caring for Caregivers: An Antenatal Wellbeing Program

Caring for Caregivers: Evaluating the Acceptability and Feasibility of Implementation of an Evidence-Informed Program to Support Caregiver Wellbeing in Antenatal Services


Sponsor

Flinders University

Enrollment

48 participants

Start Date

Jul 23, 2024

Study Type

Interventional

Conditions

Summary

This multi-method evaluation will evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of a caregiver wellbeing program delivered by CaFHS in South Australia. The caregiver wellbeing program will deliver evidence-informed caregiver wellbeing psychoeducation into these routine services. Our evaluation aims to determine whether the caregiver wellbeing program is feasible and acceptable to deliver within these routine services and whether it is effective in improving the wellbeing of caregivers. To achieve our aims, we will conduct pre- and post- program surveys and focus groups with caregivers who participated in the program, and staff who were involved in implementing or delivering the program. To support and evaluate a future statewide roll out, this study will also evaluate the feasibility of conducting a definitive trial.


Eligibility

Sex: Both males and femalesMin Age: 18 Yearss

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

Becoming a parent is one of life's biggest transitions, and it can take a real toll on wellbeing — particularly for new caregivers who may feel isolated, overwhelmed, or unsure of what to expect. This study is evaluating a new caregiver wellbeing program being rolled out within routine antenatal services provided by the Child and Family Health Services (CaFHS) in South Australia, before a baby is born. The program delivers evidence-based psychoeducation — practical information about mental health, coping, and wellbeing — as part of the regular antenatal parenting groups caregivers already attend. Researchers want to find out whether the program is something that works smoothly within the existing services, whether parents and staff find it helpful and acceptable, and whether it actually improves caregiver wellbeing. Parents or caregivers attending a CaFHS antenatal parenting group at a participating site during the study period are eligible to participate. Staff involved in delivering or implementing the program can also take part in the evaluation. There are no exclusion criteria for this study. The project is run by Flinders University.

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Interventions

The Caring for Caregivers Trial is a feasibility proof-of-concept pre- and post-trial evaluating the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of a caregiver wellbeing program delivered by Child a

The Caring for Caregivers Trial is a feasibility proof-of-concept pre- and post-trial evaluating the feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of a caregiver wellbeing program delivered by Child and Family Health Services (CaFHS) in South Australia. The caregiver wellbeing program was codesigned and developed in 2023. This was achieved through undertaking three activities: 1) a service review where we mapped existing services available within CaFHS, 2) focus groups with 25 caregivers who have access CaFHS services and 9 CaFHS service providers, and 3) a scoping review examining 70 evidence-informed programs and interventions that support caregiver wellbeing and self-care. Through triangulating the results of these three activities and working closely with CaFHS leadership, consumer researchers, and the CaFHS consumer advisory committee, we used the Intervention Mapping Methodology to develop a caregiver wellbeing program that is relevant, feasible and evidence-informed that could be implemented by CaFHS. This content will be delivered by CaFHS within antenatal classes delivered at the Women’s and Children’s Hospital (WCH). The WCH offer a suite of antenatal classes to caregivers and the caregiver wellbeing program will be offered over a 2-month period as an optional class. The caregiver wellbeing program class will be delivered by the CaFHS project manager (a registered nurse and midwife) and all caregivers enrolled into one of these classes will receive the evidence-informed caregiver wellbeing program. The caregiver wellbeing program comprises of approximately 2 hours of content that is structured with a powerpoint presentation and focuses primarily on delivering evidence-informed psychoeducation and facilitation group discussions. Overall the program covers 6 objectives. The objectives are: 1. Introduction to Child and Family Health Service (CaFHS) 2. Understanding Mental Health, Parenting and Seeking Support 3. Discussing Norms, Expectations, and Individualised Experience 4. Navigating Relationships and Social Connections 5. Empowering Self-Worth and Self-Care Strategies 6. Providing Support for Accessing Services and Seeking Help The project manager will monitor fidelity through a project specific fidelity checklist to track if all 6 objectives are achieved in the class. The project manager will also write reflections in a research journal after each class to keep qualitative notes relating to time spent on each objective, observations regarding participant responses to the content, any ad hoc adaptations to content due to participant engagement, etc. To further understand the feasibility and fidelity of implementation and acceptability of the caregiver wellbeing program, focus groups will be conducted with approximately 10-15 caregivers who received the intervention and 10-15 CaFHS and WCH staff involved in implementation. Participants will be selected as the first 15 to opt-in. Focus groups will be with approximately 5-10 participants and will be conducted by the Flinders University research team (lead researcher and research assistants) and the discussion will focus on 1) the impact of the program on mental health and wellbeing, 2) what was liked or disliked about the content, 3) if there are any concerns regarding the content or how it was delivered, 4) if they would like any modifications to the content or how it was delivered. Specifically, staff will additionally be asked 1) how well the content and the delivery integrates into routine services, 2) if there were any challenges to delivery or implementation, and 3) perspectives on whether the program would work in other hospitals or settings.


Locations(1)

SA, Australia

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