Affiliation:
1. School of Social Work Boston College Chestnut Hill Massachusetts USA
2. Brown School Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis Missouri USA
3. Luskin School of Public Affairs University of California at Los Angeles Los Angeles California USA
4. International Center for Child Health and Development Field Office Masaka Uganda
5. Reach the Youth Uganda Kampala Uganda
6. Rakai Health Sciences Program Rakai Uganda
7. Grossman School of Medicine New York University New York City New York USA
8. Vice Provost Office Washington University in St. Louis St. Louis Missouri USA
Abstract
AbstractFamily functioning plays a critical role in childhood disruptive behavior disorders (The Family Journal, 2003, 11(1), 33–41; Research in Nursing and Health, 2016, 39(4), 229–243). Yet, there is limited research on the impact of evidence‐based family strengthening interventions on improving family cohesion as a protective factor among children experiencing behavioral challenges. To address this gap, we analyzed data (N = 636) from the SMART Africa‐Uganda study (2016–2022), a cluster randomized clinical trial testing an evidence‐based family‐strengthening intervention called Amaka Amasanyufu (translated as "Happy Families" in the local language). Children aged 8–13 and their caregivers were recruited from 26 public primary schools that were randomized to: (1) control condition receiving generalized psychosocial literature (10 schools), (2) intervention delivered via parent peers (eight schools), and (3) intervention delivered via community healthcare workers (eight schools). Children completed the family cohesion questionnaire at baseline, 8 weeks, 16 weeks, and 6 months post‐intervention completion. The intervention effectiveness was evaluated via a three‐level logistic mixed effects model with pairwise comparisons across study conditions within each time point. Participants in the parent–peer intervention group had greater odds of being in the higher family cohesion group than participants in the control group at 8 weeks (OR = 3.24), 16 weeks (OR = 1.88) and 6 months (OR = 2.07). At 8 weeks, 16 weeks, and 6 months, participants in the community health worker group had 3.98, 2.08, and 1.79 times greater odds of being in the higher family cohesion group than participants in the control group, respectively. Our findings strengthen the evidence base for Amaka Amansayufu as an effective intervention that can be utilized in SSA to improve family cohesion in families with children experiencing behavioral challenges.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
Cited by
1 articles.
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