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Acceptability and feasibility of the World Health Organization's Caregiver Skills Training Programme (WHO CST) delivered

Authors :
Janet Siu-Ping, Lau
Simon Man-Kin, Lai
Florence To-Sau, Ip
Paul Wai-Ching, Wong
Who Cst, Team
Chiara, Servili
Erica, Salomone
Laura, Pacione
Stephanie, Shire
Felicity L, Brown
Source :
Frontiers in psychiatry. 13
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Local children with developmental disabilities were deprived of learning opportunities due to recent social and health incidents, resulting in elevating challenging behaviors and familial conflicts. This study explored the acceptability and feasibility of the World Health Organization's Caregiver Skills Training Programme (WHO CST) in alternative delivery modes under new normal and post COVID-19 period.CST was deliveredHigh levels of acceptability and feasibility of the training programme were supported by ratings on comprehensiveness and relevance, agreement with their personal values, duration, and usefulness. IP and VC groups yielded more positive changes than EL and WLC groups with 3, 16, 13, and -3% in General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), -13, -15, -6 and 0% in Difficulties-total, and 36.5, 35.5, 5.8 and 2.4% in Prosocial Scale at Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) for EL, VC, IP, and WLC groups respectively from baseline to 12 weeks after intervention. Results from two standardized scales echoed with qualitative observations that the programme helped improve caregivers' well-being, child's communication, and behaviors across intervention groups.Current findings revealed that CST delivered in three alternative modes were acceptable and feasible, and yielded positive impacts toward both caregivers and children. In-person coaching, and skill-practicing sessions were effective in mitigating child's challenging behaviors while personal interaction, either face-to-face or virtual, is a significant factor in uplifting caregivers' well-being, whereas the self-learning model was appreciated by the busy caregivers. In clinical practice, needs and goals of families and the constraints of remote interventions at the settings should be balanced.

Details

ISSN :
16640640
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........72e90deb8978b4d55b000ddf58bdc1d8