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

NCT06455397 · University of Manitoba
In plain English

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Official title
Implementing BEAM: An mHealth Tool to Prevent Mental Health Problems and Improve Developmental Outcomes in Young Children
About this study
The initial five years of a child's life mark a critical developmental phase and a period of high sensitivity to environmental stressors, including the impact of parental mental illness (MI) and parenting stress. Research has consistently linked parental MI with a broad range of child-related issues, including irritability, sleep disturbances, and socio-emotional developmental impairments. These adverse outcomes are often attributed to environmental factors, including parental modeling of maladaptive emotion coping strategies such as avoidance and aggression and harsh parenting practices characterized by reactive discipline and conflictual interactions. Notably, when parental MI is accompanied by additional stressors such as domestic conflict or financial strains, the long-term risks for children are exacerbated. Further, the chronicity of parental MI has critical implications for children. When stressors and parental MI are persistent, the risk of adverse developmental outcomes for children increases, putting children at heightened risk for stress and development of their own psychopathology. This highlights the critical need for interventions that address parental MI and the broader spectrum of parenting stress and its multifaceted impacts on children. Despite the need for parents to improve their stress and mental health symptoms, the majority of parents do not access evidence-based treatments. Previous research has documented many barriers preventing parents from accessing care. These barriers include service backlogs, long waitlists, high costs of individual therapy, lack of information of where to access interventions, and overwhelming childcare demands. Additionally, although evidence-based treatments exist, most interventions do not comprehensively address the mental health of both parents and children. This gap in services is significant, given meta-analytic evidence indicating that dual-generation programs, which simultaneously target parent MI and child well-being, yield impacts that are 50% larger in promoting positive child outcomes compared to programs focused solely on addressing parental MI. There is a clear need to provide accessible and scalable solutions that promote positive mental health and developmental outcomes in at-risk children. Digital mental health interventions offer a potential avenue for addressing family needs and barriers to care that are an accessible and low-cost option, and research shows great promise for treating adult depression using these methods. Additional emerging research highlights the efficacy of app-based programs in improving parental MI and parent-child interactions. However, very limited existing app-based or mHealth programs address both parental mental health and parenting skills, which indirectly targets child well-being. In response to this need, the investigators conducted qualitative research (i.e., focus groups and individual interviews with parents with lived experience) and consulted with a parent advisory board to co-develop a program that simultaneously addressed parental MI and parenting. Results suggested that parents wanted accessible, online services grounded in expert research. Alongside patient-partners and community providers the investigators then developed the BEAM (Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health) app-based program. The BEAM program is aligned with best practices in mHealth programs including patient-driven priorities, rapid-cycle iterations to facilitate continual improvements, and a commitment to evidenced-based care. Key elements of the original BEAM program include: (1) expert-led educational videos using transdiagnostic therapy and emotion-focused parenting strategies; (2) brief group sessions to consolidate therapeutic content and build social support; (3) a community forum to enhance social connection; and (4) symptom monitoring to track progress. In case of a mental health or parenting-related crisis, clinical coaches also consult via phone. BEAM builds on evidence from the investigative team's knowledge synthesis work suggesting that mHealth therapeutics can address parent MI and while appealing to parents. The BEAM intervention has consistently demonstrated promising outcomes across various trials to date. The investigative team's latest phase II RCT with mothers of toddlers found that the BEAM program outperformed a services-as-usual (SAU) control condition. Significant improvements in parental MI symptoms including anxiety, anger, and alcohol use were observed. Additionally, BEAM was effective in reducing harsh parenting practices and negative parent-child interactions, with substantial improvements observed for families living in poverty. This trial also showed noteworthy participant engagement with retention rates (84%), comparable to in-person therapy sessions. This phase of research built on and replicated the success of earlier trials with both an open pilot and pilot RCT demonstrating BEAM's efficacy in reducing MI symptoms such as depression, anxiety, anger, sleep issues, and substance use. Qualitative feedback from the initial trials emphasized the positive impact of the BEAM program on mental health and parenting, leading to enhanced quality of life and improved family relationships. Participants also highlighted the value of the social support gained through the online community. To further address family mental health needs, this trial will test the readiness of the BEAM program for scalability. The current study involves a hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial design to build on previous work. The investigators will use both effectiveness and implementation metrics including short-term follow ups of primary outcomes alongside longer-term follow-ups of mental health and socio-developmental outcomes with linked administrative data. This hybrid design follows the "type 2" model, in which effectiveness and implementation are co-primary aims and can be tracked simultaneously as the trial progresses. This approach is consistent with the investigative team's rapid-cycle program development to date in which BEAM has been tested and adapted in response to patient and provider feedback through each iteration. This implementation trial aims to maximize BEAM's accessibility, equitability, and effectiveness for future nation-wide implementation. For the current implementation trial, the investigators conducted a full App rebuild to create BEAM Version 2.0 based on participant and Parent Advisory Board feedback. BEAM 2.0 updates include improvements to psychoeducational video content (e.g. high-quality video production, animations, closed captioning), the mobile application user experience (e.g. push notifications, direct messaging, integrated video player that adjusts video quality based on available bandwidth, easy-to-navigate platform), and functionality across mobile device operating systems (iOS, Android). The weekly psychoeducational videos, short symptom tracking surveys, and social support community forum are now housed seamlessly within the BEAM app. Other aspects of the program include individual check ins with trained peer coaches, group drop-in sessions, and a connection to a systems navigator, whose role will be to support participants in accessing community resources.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria: 1. Moderate to severe symptoms of depression, anxiety, parenting stress, and/or anger (as measured by the PHQ-9, GAD-7, PSI, and PROMIS-Anger). Those who do not have moderate to severe symptoms will meet with a member of the program research team to determine eligibility. This eligibility decision will be based on clinical judgement, ensuring that those with need can participate. 2. Being a parent or primary caregiver of any gender to an 24- to 71-month-old (i.e., 2-5 year old) child. 3. Living in Manitoba. 4. Able to participate in check ins (15 to 60 minutes) via Zoom, phone, direct messaging with a parent peer coach. 5. 18 years or older. 6. Able to understand/read/speak in English. 7. Willing to complete four 45-min questionnaires. 8. At eligibility screening, a question asks if participants have access to an electronic device for viewing videos and participating in Zoom meetings. Participants who do not have access will be asked to contact the research team. The team may be able to accommodate a limited number of participants by providing relevant devices for the duration of the study. 9. Participants have IP addresses within Manitoba, Canada, as determined by IP address in REDCap at time of eligibility screener questionnaire completion. Participants will be required to securely upload a photo that includes both a valid piece of Manitoba government identification and the participant's face (i.e., a 'selfie'). Exclusion Criteria: 1. Living outside of Manitoba. 2. Being a parent or primary caregiver to a child outside of the ages of 24- to 71-months (i.e., 2-5 years). 3. Previously participated in an earlier BEAM trial. 4. Parents who report self-harm that required medical attention within the past six months or a suicide attempt within the past year will be ineligible to participate in BEAM unless the participant is engaged in individual therapy that attends to this acute risk level with one of the following professionals for the duration of the BEAM program: psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker, or psychotherapist. The research team will email all prospective participants who are pending eligibility to schedule a phone call. This call will determine whether it is feasible to connect the participant with an individual therapist to manage specific needs before engaging in the BEAM program, and discuss if the BEAM program is the right fit for the participant's present needs. Co-parents will be permitted to participate in BEAM regardless of current mental health challenges. Therefore, co-parents are only subject to inclusion criterion (3) and criteria (5-9). Instead of meeting inclusion criteria (2), parenting partners must be a "co-parent (e.g., the child's mom, dad, step-parent) or other primary caregiver (e.g., the child's grandma, cousin, uncle, auntie)" to the corresponding participant's 24- to 71-month-old (i.e., 2-5 year old) child. Co-parents will not receive the same pre-trial screening as parent participants, and thus will not be subject to exclusion criteria.
Study design
Enrollment target: 400 participants
Allocation: na
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2024-03-11
Estimated completion: 2027-06
Last updated: 2025-06-18
Interventions
Behavioral: The Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health (BEAM) Program
Primary outcomes
  • Change in parent mental health symptom composite. (All measures to be assessed pre-intervention (T1), immediately after intervention (T2), at 6-month follow-up (T3), and at 12-month follow-up (T4).)
  • Feasibility of the BEAM program. (To be assessed immediately after intervention (T2).)
  • Acceptability and uptake of the BEAM program. (To be assessed pre-intervention (T1), during intervention, and immediately after intervention (T2).)
Sponsor
Leslie E. Roos · other
With: Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Manitoba Centre for Health Policy, George & Fay Yee Centre for Healthcare Innovation, Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, Family Dynamics, Manitoba, Canada
Contacts & investigators
ContactLeslie E Roos, PhD · contact · leslie.roos@umanitoba.ca · 2044747400
ContactMaryem Zahra Project Coordinator, Bachelor of Arts (Hon) · contact · Maryem.Zahra@umanitoba.ca
InvestigatorLeslie E Roos, PhD · principal_investigator, University of Manitoba
All locations (1)
University of Manitoba - Department of Psychology & PediatricsRecruiting
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Building Emotional Awareness and Mental Health (BEAM) 2024-2027 · TrialPath