RecruitingNot ApplicableNCT06455397

Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health (BEAM) 2024-2027

Implementing BEAM: An mHealth Tool to Prevent Mental Health Problems and Improve Developmental Outcomes in Young Children


Sponsor

Leslie E. Roos

Enrollment

400 participants

Start Date

Mar 11, 2024

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

Children are highly sensitive to adversity during their first five years of life, with exposure to chronic parental mental illness (MI) consistently linked to socio-emotional impairments and mental health problems in children. Children born during the COVID-19 pandemic were exposed to unprecedented level of parental distress, with parental MI reported at three times the pre-pandemic rates. This situation underscored a pressing need for scalable solutions to foster positive mental health and developmental outcomes for a generation of children. In response, the investigators developed the Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health (BEAM) program, an innovative mobile health (mHealth) solution for parents of young children. Clinical trials to date evaluating BEAM have shown promising results, demonstrating reductions in parent depression, anxiety, and harsh parenting practices. This trial involves an effectiveness-implementation hybrid design with co-primary aims of (1) determining BEAM's effectiveness in improving child mental health and developmental outcomes, and (2) evaluating the implementation of BEAM in the community through metrics such as feasibility, acceptability, and uptake. The secondary aim of this trial is to measure BEAM's effectiveness in improving long-term biopsychosocial family outcomes using administrative data. A final exploratory aim of this trial will measure the cost-utility of delivering BEAM relative to extant health programming. This trial will evaluate the effectiveness of implementing the BEAM intervention in the community with a sample of 400 parent participants with a child aged 24-71 months. Study participants will complete 12 weeks of psychoeducation modules in the BEAM app, with access to an online social support forum and check ins with a peer coach. Assessments of parent and child symptoms will occur at pre-test before BEAM begins (T1), immediately after the last week of the BEAM intervention (post-test, T2), 6-month follow-up (T3), and 12-month follow-up (T4). Beginning in 2025, the trial offers participants the option to invite one parenting partner to join them in the program. A parenting partner is defined as a co-parent (e.g., the child's mother, father, or step-parent) or another primary caregiver (e.g., a grandparent, cousin, uncle, or aunt). Each participant may invite one such individual, hereafter referred to as a "co-parent." Co-parents will have access to the BEAM intervention and all its features, with the exception of peer coaching. Co-parents will be eligible to complete the same outcome measures at the same timepoints as participants. Three differences that will separate co-parents from participants are: (1) co-parents will not be asked to complete the ASQ:2-SE or ASQ-3 secondary outcome measures; (2) co-parents will not have access to peer coaching, and (3) co-parents will not be required to be experiencing moderate to severe symptoms of depression, anxiety, parenting stress, and/or anger. (Please see Eligibility \> Eligibility Criteria for the less restrictive inclusion and exclusion criteria for co-parents.) Co-parents will not be counted toward the trial sample size of n=400, and will not be included in primary analyses. Instead, co-parent data will be used in sub-studies to address exploratory research questions. The BEAM program offers a promising solution to addressing elevated parental mental health symptoms, parenting stress, and related child functioning concerns. The present implementation trial aims to extend the groundwork established by an open pilot trial and RCT of the BEAM program, in a next step of testing BEAM's readiness for nationwide scaling.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is testing a mental health support program called BEAM (Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health) designed specifically for parents and caregivers of young children. The program aims to help with depression, anxiety, stress, and anger. **You may be eligible if...** - You are a parent or primary caregiver of a child between 2 and 5 years old - You are experiencing moderate to severe symptoms of depression, anxiety, parenting stress, or anger - You meet clinical eligibility criteria as assessed by the research team **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You do not have a child in the target age range - You do not meet the symptom threshold for the program Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

BEHAVIORALThe Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health (BEAM) Program

The BEAM Program builds on mHealth best practices and evidence-based program design principles with the core objectives of improving maternal mental health and fostering supportive parenting. Program content draws on transdiagnostic emotion-focused mental health and third wave Cognitive Behavioural Therapy principles such as Dialectical Behavioural Therapy, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, and the Unified Protocol. Program delivery will be facilitated through a mobile application. The BEAM program uses a stepped care model to address the pressing need for accessible and effective mental health interventions. Stepped care is a framework that provides mental health services in a tiered manner, ensuring that participants receive appropriate levels of support based on the severity of needs. At the heart of this model are BEAM peer coaches, who will have the most direct contact with participants. Peer coaches are trained to escalate concerns to the program clinical team as required.


Locations(1)

University of Manitoba - Department of Psychology & Pediatrics

Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

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NCT06455397


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