- ICH GCP
- 미국 임상 시험 레지스트리
- 임상시험 NCT07641244
Experimental Evidence of the Impact of Parental Income on Child Mental Health and Neuroimmune Function
Growing up in a lower-income family robustly predicts worse mental health in adolescence and early adulthood. How does variability in family income "get under the skin" of the developing child and via what mechanisms does it increase risk for mental illness? Moreover, could supplements to family income at critical developmental periods help to prevent later youth mental illness? To address these questions, we leverage an innovative existing double blind randomized controlled trial of 3-years of substantial income supplements to parents.
By experimentally studying the impacts of these income supplements on families and subsequent youth development, we can examine causal pathways from family income to risk for mental illness via family stress and neuroimmune mechanisms in ways never done before. Moreover, by measuring the longer-term impact of 3 years of income supplements to parents on their child's neuroimmune signaling and risk for mental illness, we can examine the policy implications for child development of unconditional cash transfers to parents and identify how and for whom these supplements help. We will test these basic and translational questions in a sample of 1,200 youth with lower-income parents randomly assigned to receive either a substantial monthly income supplement or a minimal monthly supplement for 3 years, starting when youth were between age 5 - 14 years old. We will follow up with youth and their parent 1 - 2 and 3 - 4 years after the intervention and examine whether income supplements predict better youth mental health during adolescence, as well as whether factors like child age and neighborhood quality modulate intervention effects. Additionally, we explore family stress mechanisms through which the intervention may impact child mental health. Finally, we will measure peripheral inflammation (inflammatory biomarkers and classical monocytes) and use MRI to assess threat, reward, and regulatory neural activity and connectivity among 500 of these youth. Our central hypothesis is that income supplements will decrease family and youth stress and improve parenting, which will improve neuroimmune signaling and decrease risk for psychopathology. Moreover, these effects will remain years after termination of the transfers and be strongest among families who received the intervention earlier in the child's life. This research will provide timely, relevant public health knowledge that will help policy makers understand the longer-term brain, immune, and mental health impacts of cash transfers to parents, while also advancing the science of the sociocontextual and neuroimmune pathways through which variability in family income impacts risk for psychopathology.
연구 개요
상태
연구 유형
등록 (추정된)
단계
- 해당 없음
연락처 및 위치
연구 연락처
- 이름: Trinh L Ha
- 전화번호: (847) 868-2409
- 이메일: trinh.ha@northwestern.edu
연구 연락처 백업
- 이름: Cary R Nusslock, PhD
- 이메일: nusslock@northwestern.edu
연구 장소
-
-
Illinois
-
Evanston, Illinois, 미국, 60208
- 모병
- Northwestern University
-
연락하다:
- Cary R Nusslock
- 전화번호: (847) 868-2409
- 이메일: edcyouth@u.northwestern.edu
-
-
참여기준
자격 기준
공부할 수 있는 나이
- 어린이
- 성인
건강한 자원 봉사자를 받아들입니다
설명
Inclusion Criteria:
- Child of a participant enrolled in the Every Dollar Counts intervention. Youth were between ages 5 and 14 at the start of the intervention (followed up when ages 10 to 18)
- Biological parent who lives with the child must be part of the original income study
- For the in-person neuroimaging subsample: family must live within a 2-hour drive of downtown Chicago
Exclusion Criteria:
- Youth not between ages 5 and 14 at the start of the intervention
- Parent not enrolled in the Every Dollar Counts program
공부 계획
연구는 어떻게 설계됩니까?
디자인 세부사항
- 주 목적: 기초 과학
- 할당: 무작위화되지 않음
- 중재 모델: 단일 그룹 할당
- 마스킹: 없음(오픈 라벨)
무기와 개입
참가자 그룹 / 팔 |
개입 / 치료 |
|---|---|
|
실험적: Monetary Incentive Delay fMRI task
fMRI task to engage cortical striatal neural circuity
|
fMRI task to engage in cortical striatal neural circuitry during reward
Emotional n-back fMRI task to engage in socioemotional and working memory
|
|
실험적: Emotional N-back fMRI task
fMRI task to engage working memory and socioemotional processing neural circuitry
|
fMRI task to engage in cortical striatal neural circuitry during reward
Emotional n-back fMRI task to engage in socioemotional and working memory
|
연구는 무엇을 측정합니까?
주요 결과 측정
결과 측정 |
측정값 설명 |
기간 |
|---|---|---|
|
Brain response to fMRI tasks
기간: 5 years
|
The monetary incentive delay and emotional n-back tasks will increase neural activity in reward and working memory and socioemotional processes within the brain.
|
5 years
|
공동 작업자 및 조사자
연구 기록 날짜
연구 주요 날짜
연구 시작 (실제)
기본 완료 (추정된)
연구 완료 (추정된)
연구 등록 날짜
최초 제출
QC 기준을 충족하는 최초 제출
처음 게시됨 (실제)
연구 기록 업데이트
마지막 업데이트 게시됨 (실제)
QC 기준을 충족하는 마지막 업데이트 제출
마지막으로 확인됨
추가 정보
이 연구와 관련된 용어
기타 연구 ID 번호
- EXZVPWZBLUE8
- 1R01MH139198-01 (미국 NIH 보조금/계약)
개별 참가자 데이터(IPD) 계획
개별 참가자 데이터(IPD)를 공유할 계획입니까?
약물 및 장치 정보, 연구 문서
미국 FDA 규제 의약품 연구
미국 FDA 규제 기기 제품 연구
이 정보는 변경 없이 clinicaltrials.gov 웹사이트에서 직접 가져온 것입니다. 귀하의 연구 세부 정보를 변경, 제거 또는 업데이트하도록 요청하는 경우 register@clinicaltrials.gov. 문의하십시오. 변경 사항이 clinicaltrials.gov에 구현되는 즉시 저희 웹사이트에도 자동으로 업데이트됩니다. .
정신 질환에 대한 임상 시험
-
Jordi Zaragoza아직 모집하지 않음
Psychological fMRI task에 대한 임상 시험
-
NYU Langone HealthNational Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)완전한
-
Medical University of ViennaMedical University of Graz아직 모집하지 않음
-
New York UniversityNational Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)모병
-
Rennes University HospitalUniversité de Rennes, Laboratoire du Traitement du Signal et de l'Image (LTSI); Institut... 그리고 다른 협력자들완전한
-
Children's Cancer Hospital Egypt 57357완전한
-
Weill Medical College of Cornell UniversityMemorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center빼는