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Promoting Cognitive Stimulation in Parents Across Infancy and Toddlerhood: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Authors :
Elizabeth B. Miller
Erin Roby
Yudong Zhang
Lerzan Coskun
Johana M. Rosas
Marc A. Scott
Juliana Gutierrez
Daniel S. Shaw
Alan L. Mendelsohn
Pamela A. Morris-Perez
Source :
The Journal of Pediatrics. 255:159-165.e4
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

To test the impact of the fully integrated Smart Beginnings model on parental support of cognitive stimulation from 6-24 months across infancy and toddlerhood.Single-blind, two-site randomized clinical trial of the SB intervention. Enrollment took place at birth in postpartum units of hospitals in New York City and Pittsburgh, PA with a consecutive sample of 403 mother-infant dyads. SB combines Video Interaction Project (VIP) - 14-session universal primary prevention program delivered in the pediatric clinic at the time of well-child visits birth-36 months - with potential for Family Check-Up (FCU) - 3-4-session targeted secondary prevention home-visiting program. The principal outcome was parental support of cognitive stimulation assessed via parent survey and video-recorded observations of parent-child interactions. Ordinary least squares and mixed effects regressions were conducted.Families were mostly Black/African-American (50%) or Latinx (42%); all were Medicaid eligible (100%). SB significantly promoted cognitive stimulation during infancy and toddlerhood for most survey outcomes across time, including StimQ common total (Effect Size [ES]=.25, p=.01) and READ Quantity (ES=.19, p=.04) and Quality (ES=.30, p=.001). For the observations, the impact of SB varied by time, with significant impacts at 6 (ES=.37-.40, p.001) and 24 (ES=.27-.30, p.001) months, but not 18 months.SB positively promotes cognitive stimulation from infancy through toddlerhood using the integrated model. This study adds to the body of research showing preventive interventions in pediatric primary care and home visiting can support early relational health including parental support of cognitive stimulation.

Details

ISSN :
00223476
Volume :
255
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d7aa8d62f5242278f0d8e213a382ddc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2022.11.013