Infant mental health services for birth and foster families of maltreated pre-school children in foster care (BeST? ): a cluster-randomized phase 3 clinical effectiveness trial

Karen Crawford, Robin Young, Philip Wilson, Manuela Deidda, Matt Forde, Susanne Millar, Alex McConnachie, Kathleen Boyd, Emma McIntosh, Dennis Ougrin, Marion Henderson, Christopher Gillberg, Gary Kainth, Fiona Turner, Edmund J. S. Sonuga-Barke, Bridie Fitzpatrick, Helen Minnis*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Children entering foster care are at high risk of poor mental health. In this single-blind, cluster-randomized phase 3 trial, 382 families with 488 0–5-year-old children, entering foster care, were randomized to the New Orleans Intervention Model (NIM) or social work services as usual (SAU). NIM offers infant mental health assessment (~3 months) and treatment (6–9 months) to children and to their birth and foster families, aiming to improve child mental health and recommend return home or adoption. The principal outcome was child mental health, as measured by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire Total Difficulties (SDQ-TD) scale at 2.5 years after study entry. In total, 286 families (149 NIM and 137 SAU, 367 children) were followed-up (79.4%). Intention-to-treat analysis found no intervention effect of NIM: mean (s.d.) SDQ-TD NIM, 11.5 (7.6); SAU, 11.1 (7.2); adjusted mean difference (NIM − SAU), 1.4; 95% confidence interval (−0.63, 3.53); P = 0.17. No within-trial effects for primary or secondary outcomes were observed. Despite its components being delivered to a high standard, the UK legal context surrounding NIM led to it being impossible to deliver to all eligible families, and less than 70% of families received the intervention to which they were randomized. Future research will be required to evaluate NIM in more favorable social and legal contexts. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT02653716.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberebad024
Pages (from-to)1617-1625
Number of pages9
JournalNature Medicine
Volume31
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2025

Funding

We are grateful to both the Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish Government and The NSPCC for funding the feasibility phase of the study. The funder of this definitive RCT (National Institute for Health Research (NIHR), PHR 12/211/54) had no role in trial design, implementation, data analysis, data interpretation or publication of findings.

Keywords

  • foster care
  • mental health
  • family care
  • support services
  • family stress

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