Preventive Primary Care Parenting Intervention RCT for 3-Month Infants
Summary
NIH registered ClinicalTrials.gov study NCT07541716, a randomized controlled trial evaluating a structured early parenting support program for families with 3-month-old infants experiencing early regulatory difficulties. Participants scoring above a predefined threshold on a regulatory-problem screening questionnaire are enrolled and assigned to either the intervention group (one individual session, five group sessions, and mobile app access) or usual care. Researchers will assess parental stress, parental self-efficacy, and infant regulatory problems at baseline, 6, 9, and 12 months.
“The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of a structured parenting support program for families with young infants experiencing early regulatory difficulties.”
What changed
NIH registered a new clinical trial (NCT07541716) on ClinicalTrials.gov, a randomized controlled trial testing a structured early parenting support program called 'Eat, sleep, cry - repeat' for families with 3-month-old infants identified with early regulatory difficulties. Participants are screened and randomized to either the intervention (individual session, five group sessions, and mobile app psychoeducational content) or usual care. The trial includes assessments at baseline, 6, 9, and 12 months of infant age.
Healthcare providers, clinical researchers, and families seeking clinical trial options should be aware of this registered study for research transparency purposes. The study registration itself does not create compliance obligations for healthcare organizations; it provides a protocol record for those recruiting or considering participation.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Developing and Testing a Preventive Primary Care Parenting Intervention to Strengthen Parent-Infant Co-Regulation in Families Experiencing Early Regulatory Difficulties
N/A NCT07541716 Kind: NA Apr 21, 2026
Abstract
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of a structured parenting support program for families with young infants experiencing early regulatory difficulties. Participants are families with infants approximately 3 months of age who score above a predefined threshold on a screening questionnaire assessing early regulatory problems.
The main questions this study aims to answer are:
- Does participation in the parenting support program reduce parental stress and improve parental self-efficacy from baseline to post-intervention?
- Does the intervention reduce infant regulatory problems (e.g., excessive crying, feeding difficulties, and sleep problems) at 6-month follow-up (i.e., when the child is approximately 12 months old)?
Researchers will compare families receiving the structured parenting support program to families receiving usual care to evaluate the effects of the intervention.
Participants will complete questionnaires when the infant is approximately 3-4 months old (baseline), around 6 months of age (post-intervention), and follow-up assessments will be conducted when the child is approximately 9 and 12 months old.
If assigned to the intervention group, participants will attend one individual session and five group sessions led by trained psycho-educators and receive access to psycho-educational content through a mobile application.
Conditions: Infant Regulatory Problems, Regulatory Problems in Infancy, Parental Stress, Parental Self-efficacy
Interventions: Structured early parenting support program, called "Eat, sleep, cry - repeat"
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