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The NSPCC UK Minding the Baby® (MTB) home-visiting programme, supporting young mothers (aged 14-25) in the first 2 years of their baby's life: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial

Young mothers living in low-income urban settings often are exposed to significant and chronic environmental difficulties including poverty, social isolation and poor education and typically also have to cope with personal histories of abuse and depression. Minding the Baby® (MTB) is an interdiscipl...

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Published in:Current controlled trials in cardiovascular medicine 2016-10, Vol.17 (1), p.486, Article 486
Main Authors: Longhi, Elena, Murray, Lynne, Hunter, Rachael, Wellsted, David, Taylor-Colls, Samantha, MacKenzie, Kathryn, Rayns, Gwynne, Cotmore, Richard, Fonagy, Peter, Fearon, Richard M Pasco
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creator Longhi, Elena
Murray, Lynne
Hunter, Rachael
Wellsted, David
Taylor-Colls, Samantha
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Rayns, Gwynne
Cotmore, Richard
Fonagy, Peter
Fearon, Richard M Pasco
description Young mothers living in low-income urban settings often are exposed to significant and chronic environmental difficulties including poverty, social isolation and poor education and typically also have to cope with personal histories of abuse and depression. Minding the Baby® (MTB) is an interdisciplinary home-visiting programme developed to support first-time young mothers, which integrates primary care and mental health approaches into a single intensive intervention from the last trimester of pregnancy until the child's second birthday. The primary aim of the intervention is to promote caregiver sensitivity, and, secondarily, to promote both child and maternal socioemotional outcomes. This is a multisite randomised controlled trial (RCT) with a target recruitment of 200 first-time adolescent mothers (under 26 years of age). One hundred participants will be randomised to the MTB group and they will receive the MTB programme in addition to the usual services available in their areas. Those participants not allocated to MTB will receive Treatment as Usual (TAU) only. Researchers will carry out blind assessments at baseline (before the birth of the baby), and outcome assessments around the child's first and second birthdays. The primary outcome will be the quality of maternal sensitivity and the secondary outcomes will focus on attachment security, child cognitive/language development, behavioural problems, postponed childbearing, maternal mental health and incidents of child protection interventions. This study evaluates the Minding the Baby® programme in the UK. In particular, this RCT explores the effectiveness of this integrative approach, which focusses on maternal mental issues as well as parent-infant interaction, parental concerns and developmental outcomes. ISRCTN08678682 (date of registration 3 April 2014).
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Minding the Baby® (MTB) is an interdisciplinary home-visiting programme developed to support first-time young mothers, which integrates primary care and mental health approaches into a single intensive intervention from the last trimester of pregnancy until the child's second birthday. The primary aim of the intervention is to promote caregiver sensitivity, and, secondarily, to promote both child and maternal socioemotional outcomes. This is a multisite randomised controlled trial (RCT) with a target recruitment of 200 first-time adolescent mothers (under 26 years of age). One hundred participants will be randomised to the MTB group and they will receive the MTB programme in addition to the usual services available in their areas. Those participants not allocated to MTB will receive Treatment as Usual (TAU) only. Researchers will carry out blind assessments at baseline (before the birth of the baby), and outcome assessments around the child's first and second birthdays. The primary outcome will be the quality of maternal sensitivity and the secondary outcomes will focus on attachment security, child cognitive/language development, behavioural problems, postponed childbearing, maternal mental health and incidents of child protection interventions. This study evaluates the Minding the Baby® programme in the UK. In particular, this RCT explores the effectiveness of this integrative approach, which focusses on maternal mental issues as well as parent-infant interaction, parental concerns and developmental outcomes. 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ispartof Current controlled trials in cardiovascular medicine, 2016-10, Vol.17 (1), p.486, Article 486
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subjects Adaptation, Psychological
Adolescent
Adult
Attachment
Babies
Child Development
Child, Preschool
Children & youth
Collaboration
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated - organization & administration
Families & family life
Female
Health visiting
House Calls
Humans
Hypotheses
Infant
Infant, Newborn
Interdisciplinary aspects
Intervention
Low income groups
Maternal Age
Maternal Behavior
Mental health
Mental Health Services - organization & administration
Mothers
Mothers - psychology
Nursing schools
Parenting
Parents & parenting
Post traumatic stress disorder
Pregnancy
Pregnancy in Adolescence
Primary Health Care - organization & administration
Psychotherapy
Research Design
Social Support
Social workers
Study Protocol
Surveys and Questionnaires
Teenagers
Time Factors
United Kingdom
Young Adult
title The NSPCC UK Minding the Baby® (MTB) home-visiting programme, supporting young mothers (aged 14-25) in the first 2 years of their baby's life: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
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