Cluster randomized controlled trial of a phone-based caregiver support and parenting program for Syrian and Jordanian families with young children

Joyce Rafla, Kate Schwartz, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Dennis Hilgendorf, Anaga Ramachandran, Mohammad Khanji, Rawan Abu Seriah, Mohammad Al Aabed, Ragheb Fityan, Phoebe Sloane, Ayat Al Aqra, Razan Mousa, Tareq Sharawi, Andrés Molano, Kimberly Foulds, Jere Behrman, Alice Wuermli

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

For refugee caregivers who may live in remote areas or be a highly mobile population, creating parenting programs that fit their needs and accommodate their mobility can be highly beneficial. In this article, we evaluate a 6-month, audio-only early childhood development (ECD) intervention delivered via phone (3 calls per month) to caregivers of Syrian and Jordanian backgrounds in Jordan. A sample of stipended community health volunteers (CHVs; N = 99) and their caseloads of caregivers (n = 2,298) was randomized to calls with health and nutritional content (control group) or calls with health, nutritional, and added parenting and caregiver-focused content (including content adapted from the Reach Up and Learn model). Hypothesized outcomes included reduced caregiver depressive and anxiety symptoms, parenting stress, and harsh discipline; increased parent-child learning activities and parenting self-efficacy. Exploratory outcomes (all caregiver-reported) included child development; and caregiver engagement in activities related to health and child learning following the calls. Exposure to the treatment condition resulted in a statistically significant reduction in caregivers’ depressive symptoms (d=-0.11). No other statistically significant impacts were found. Implications of these findings for caregiver interventions are discussed.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)141-153
Number of pages13
JournalEarly Childhood Research Quarterly
Volume69
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 2024

Keywords

  • Ahlan Simsim
  • Arab caregivers
  • Caregiver mental health
  • Home-visiting
  • Impact evaluation
  • Reach up and learn
  • Refugees

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Education
  • Developmental and Educational Psychology
  • Sociology and Political Science

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