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dc.contributor.author Leyton, F
dc.contributor.author Olhaberry, M
dc.contributor.author Alvarado, R
dc.contributor.author Rojas, G
dc.contributor.author Dueñas, LA
dc.contributor.author Downing, G
dc.contributor.author Steele, H
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-17T15:56:15Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-17T15:56:15Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://repositorio.uoh.cl/handle/611/970
dc.description.abstract Background: Children requiring hospitalization for psychiatric care have serious disorders, high use of psychotropic medication, and frequent readmissions. The development and implementation of therapies focused on incorporating primary caregivers or attachment figures is necessary for working with children with severe psychiatric disorders. Mentalization or parental reflective functioning (PRF) is the ability of parents to understand their children's behaviors as an expression of internal emotional states and act accordingly to help them regulate their emotions; in this way mentalizing is a key component of sensitive parenting. Video-assisted therapies have proven to be effective in promoting change in parent-child relationships. The majority of studies have been carried out with mothers of pre-school children and in an outpatient setting. Video intervention therapy (VIT) is a flexible manualized therapy, which allows the intervention to be individualized to the context where it is applied, according to the needs and resources of the people who participate in it. The objective of the study is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of applying VIT to improve the PRF of the parents as primary carers of children hospitalized in a psychiatric service. Methods: This is a pilot randomized, single-masked (outcome assessor) study with a qualitative component. It will involve a block randomization procedure to generate a 2:1 allocation (with more people allocated to the intervention arm). The intervention consists of four modules; every module has both one video-recorded play session and one VIT session per week. People assigned to the control group will receive treatment as usual plus weekly play sessions. Feasibility and acceptability of the study will be quantitatively and qualitatively assessed. Evaluation of the caregivers will include assessments of PRF, wellbeing and personality structure; assessments of children will include parent-ratings and clinician-ratings of symptomatology and general functioning. After every video feedback (VF) session, PRF, the caregiver's wellbeing and children's general functioning will be reassessed. Discussion: This study will contribute to the currently scarce evidence on how to provide family attachment-based interventions in a child inpatient psychiatric unit. It will also inform the design and implementation of a future randomized clinical trial.
dc.description.sponsorship National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research, CONICYT Chile(Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica (CONICYT))
dc.relation.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-019-3310-y
dc.subject Video feedback intervention
dc.subject Video intervention therapy
dc.subject Parental reflective functioning
dc.subject Inpatient psychiatric children
dc.title Video feedback intervention to enhance parental reflective functioning in primary caregivers of inpatient psychiatric children: protocol for a randomized feasibility trial
dc.type Artículo
uoh.revista TRIALS
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s13063-019-3310-y
dc.citation.volume 20
dc.identifier.orcid Olhaberry, Marcia/0000-0002-5135-2175
dc.identifier.orcid Leyton, Fanny/0000-0001-9404-4976
uoh.indizacion Web of Science


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