Efficacy of an Attachment-based Intervention in Residential Care (CareME)

Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2018
CareME is a group attachment-based intervention program developed for improving relational abilities in professional caregivers working in Youth Residential Care (YRC) settings. The intervention program was planned to integrate 12 group session (90 minutes each), implemented fortnightly during a 6-month period, and facilitated by two psychologists and expertise researchers on attachment framework. The project aims to produce effects on professional caregivers\' behaviors and, as an indirect effect, to produce changes on adolescents\' outcomes (age 12 to 18 years old). Regarding professional caregivers\' behaviors the project aims to improve reflective functioning, perspective taking, emotion regulation, group intervention practices and quality of relationships in RC (primary outcomes). Additionally, it\'s expected to reduce levels of professional exhaustion and improve mental health (secondary outcomes). Attachment was considered a moderator. As a result of professional\'s caregivers behavior change, it is expected to observe subsequent effects on adolescents\' psychosocial adaptation indicators, such as improvements on the quality of relationship with professional caregivers, hope, self-efficacy and in emotional regulations processes and a decrease on antisocial behavior, anger control problems and emotional suffering (secondary outcomes). Attachment was considered also a moderator. Program efficacy was evaluated using a randomized control trial (RCT). Institutions were assigned to the experimental (n = 10) and to the control (n = 11) group using a covariate adaptative randomization method. Data was assessed using a 4-wave longitudinal design (baseline, interim, post, 6-month follow-up) with professional caregivers and adolescents\' self-reports.
Epistemonikos ID: 23699292a1f5aa112cd0145e28ecbfe589001803
First added on: May 14, 2024