40 research outputs found
A Randomized Controlled Study of Parent-assisted Childrenās Friendship Training with Children having Autism Spectrum Disorders
This study evaluated Childrenās Friendship Training (CFT), a manualized parent-assisted intervention to improve social skills among second to fifth grade children with autism spectrum disorders. Comparison was made with a delayed treatment control group (DTC). Targeted skills included conversational skills, peer entry skills, developing friendship networks, good sportsmanship, good host behavior during play dates, and handling teasing. At post-testing, the CFT group was superior to the DTC group on parent measures of social skill and play date behavior, and child measures of popularity and loneliness, At 3-month follow-up, parent measures showed significant improvement from baseline. Post-hoc analysis indicated more than 87% of children receiving CFT showed reliable change on at least one measure at post-test and 66.7% after 3Ā months follow-up
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Assessing fidelity of delivery of smoking cessation behavioural support in practice.
Effectiveness of evidence-based behaviour change interventions is likely to be undermined by failure to deliver interventions as planned. Behavioural support for smoking cessation can be a highly cost-effective, life-saving intervention. However, in practice, outcomes are highly variable. Part of this may be due to variability in fidelity of intervention implementation. To date, there have been no published studies on this. The present study aimed to: evaluate a method for assessing fidelity of behavioural support; assess fidelity of delivery in two English Stop-Smoking Services; and compare the extent of fidelity according to session types, duration, individual practitioners, and component behaviour change techniques (BCTs)
Protocol for assessing feasibility, acceptability and fidelity of screening for antenatal depression (FAFSAD) by midwives in Blantyre District, Malawi
Depression is often underdiagnosed by treating health professionals. This is a situation in Malawi
where there is no routine screening of depression at antenatal clinics. Recently, a Screening Protocol for Antenatal
Depression (SPADe) that can be used by midwives to screen for antenatal depression was developed in Blantyre
District. SPADe proposes multistage screening of antenatal depression by midwives which may enable early
detection and treatment of pregnant women with depression. Proper treatment of antenatal depression can assist
in achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, utilisation of SPADe in clinical practice to screening
for depression in antenatal clinics has not been established yet. Therefore, the primary aim of this study is to assess
feasibility of screening for depression by midwives using SPADe in antenatal clinics in Blantyre District. The
secondary aim was to assess acceptability and fidelity of screening for depression by midwives using SPADe in
antenatal clinics in Blantyre District