Children who have been subject to physical, sexual or emotional abuse or neglect are at risk of developing unhealthy relationships with their caregiver, increasing the likelihood of them developing a wide range of mental health problems later in life. Norway offers few therapeutic programs for treatment of children and adolescents that focus specifically on treating traumatic experiences within attachment relationships. An intervention with this focus is Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy (DDP),where dyad refers to the unit of a child and its caregiver(s).
The Family-Based Treatment Unit (SFB) within the Division for Child- and Adolescent Mental Health (ABUP) at Telemark Hospital has started implementing DDP with funding from the "BUP Project", resulting in a multi-center implementation plan including local child protective services and the office for children, youth and family affairs. This project seeks to evaluate the implementation of DDP and assess any change in the quality of the caregiver-child interaction, parental efficacy, parental stress and wellbeing, and child emotional and behavioral problems as well as the subjective experience of this implementation among caregivers and clinicians. The results of interviews with clinicians and parents will provide feedback, guide the implementation, and provide essential knowledge about using DDP in a Norwegian setting.
Child protective services (CPS) in the municipalities of Skien and Porsgrunn will be implementing DDP in their respective services and their experiences with the process will also be collected. Mixed method assessment will be used to follow the implementation process.
The present study will contribute new knowledge of how the intervention is experienced by Norwegian children and their families, both in a clinical outpatient setting at Telemark Hospital as well as Skien and Porsgrunn Child Protective Services.
Clinicians' experiences with the implementation and use of DDP is an important dimension for its success.The project will report on what challenges arose during implementation in Norway, and how both families and clinicians experienced the process of learning, using and receiving DDP. By using the information gained directly into the process of this project it can help guide the continued implementation and contribute to its success. If DDP is shown to be a positive and helpful therapeutic methods there are plans for a multi-center randomized controlled trial.
We will investigate the specific context through participant-observations during project meetings, and analyze central documents regarding the implementation and use of DDP.
Through working closely with Child Protective Services we will also be able to explore the experiences of implementation of the treatment in different settings.
Ethical review has been conducted by the Norwegian South East Regional committee for Medical and Health Research (REK) as well as the Norwegian Centre for Research Data (NSD) and the project has been approved. The participants will receive full information, and be asked to give consent both verbally and in writing. They will be assured confidentiality and anonymity. They will be informed of their right to withdraw at any time, and that it will have no impact on their treatment at ABUP. We do not expect this study to cause any harm to participants. The observations are part of routine examination, of short duration and are conducted within the security of a familiar institution