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NCT05239754

Fresno FAWDB FIRE Program Evaluation

Completed NA Results posted Last updated 1 October 2025
What this trial tests

NA trial testing Primary Services in Fathers in 488 participants. Completed in 29 August 2025.

Timeline
1 April 2021
Primary endpoint
30 April 2025
29 August 2025

Quick facts

Lead sponsorMidwest Evaluation & Research
PhaseNA
StatusCompleted
Study typeINTERVENTIONAL
Allocationna
Designsingle group
Maskingnone
Primary purposetreatment
Enrollment488
Start date1 April 2021
Primary completion30 April 2025
Estimated completion29 August 2025
Sites1 location across United States

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Midwest Evaluation & Research

Who can join

18 Months and older, male only, with Fathers. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Results — posted to ClinicalTrials.gov

Per-arm endpoint measurements with 95% confidence intervals where reported. Source: trial results section.

Healthy Parenting Behavior Measurement #1 Primary · Change from baseline in behavior in parenting behavior (interaction with children at 12 months from enrollment).]

1A) Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy parenting behaviors one year after program enrollment? Items measured include: Parenting behavior and interaction with children measured with: 9 items- frequency of engagement in key behaviors (categories, 5-point scale) Measured on the Healthy Parenting Behavior Scale #1 as: 1=Never 2=1 to 2 days per month 3=3 or 4 days per month 4=2 or 3 days per week 5=Every day or almost every day Higher ratings indicate higher frequency of engagement in parenting behavior and interaction with children, so the

mean at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.67± 1.022
mean at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services4.10± 0.830
Healthy Co-parenting Behavior Measurement #1 Primary · Change from baseline in co-parenting behavior at 12 months from enrollment.

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy co-parenting behaviors one year after program enrollment? Items measured include: Co-parenting behavior measured with: 11 items: frequency of agreement with key co-parenting behaviors (interval, 5-point scale) Measured on the Healthy Co-Parenting Behavior Scale #1 as: 1. Strongly Disagree 2. Disagree 3. Neutral 4. Agree 5. Strongly Agree The 11 items are measured as a construct. All items are added together and divided by 11 to create the construct score. The higher the score, the better the outcome.

mean at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.49± 1.04
mean at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.50± 1.01
Healthy Financial Behavior Measurement #1 Primary · Change in parenting attitudes (towards children) at 12 months from enrollment

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy financial behaviors one year after program enrollment? Items measured include: Father financial behavior measured with: 2 items: yes (1) or no (0) questions for have checking account and have a savings account (dichotomous) Yes (1) responses indicate financial readiness, so the higher the rating, the better the score.

have savings account-baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services71
have savings account-follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services105
have checking account-baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services76
have checking account-follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services137
Healthy Parenting Attitudes Measurement #1 Secondary · Change in parenting attitudes (towards children) from baseline to immediately after program completion.

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy parenting attitudes/beliefs/expectations after completing the Fresno Fatherhood program? Items measured include: Parenting attitudes toward children measured with: 7 items: frequency of key attitudes (categories, 5-point scale) Measured on the Healthy Parenting Attitudes Scale #1 as: 1. Always 2. Often 3. Sometimes 4. Rarely 5. Never The 7 items are measured as a construct. All items are added together and divided by 7 to create the construct score. The higher the score, the better the outcome. maxim

mean at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services4.55± .482
mean at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services4.57± .451
Healthy Financial Attitudes Secondary · Change in healthy financial attitudes from baseline to immediately after program completion.

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy financial attitudes/beliefs/expectations after completing the Fresno Fatherhood program? Items measured include: 7 items: agreement with key financial attitudes (categories, 5-point scale) 1. Strongly Disagree 2. Disagree 3. Neutral 4. Agree 5. Strongly Agree The 7 items are measured as a construct. All items are added together and divided by 7 to create the construct score. The higher the score, the better the outcome. maximum score of 5.0, minimum score of 1.0

mean at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.46± .603
mean at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.64± .635
Healthy Employment Behaviors Secondary · Change from baseline in father financial behavior at 12 months from enrollment.]

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy employment behaviors one year after program enrollment? Items measured include: 1 item: yes (1) or no (0) questions for having a resume (dichotomous) Yes responses indicate employment readiness, so the higher the rating, the better the score.

have resume at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services24
have resume at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services97
Healthy Employment Attitudes Secondary · Change from baseline in healthy employment attitudes to immediately after program completion.

Will Fresno Fatherhood program participants experience significant increases in healthy employment attitudes/beliefs/expectations after completing the Fresno Fatherhood program? Items measured include: 8 items: levels of agreement with key employment attitudes (categories, 5-point scale) 1. Strongly Disagree 2. Disagree 3. Neutral 4. Agree 5. Strongly Agree The 8 items are measured as a construct. All items are added together and divided by 8 to create the construct score. The higher the score, the better the outcome. maximum score of 5.0, minimum score of 1.0

mean at baseline
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services3.97± .660
mean at follow-up
GroupValue95% CI
Primary Services4.09± .620

Sponsor's own description

The purpose of the Fresno Area Workforce Development Board FIRE program evaluation is to determine whether primary (i.e., behaviors) and secondary (i.e., attitudes) outcomes improve for participants after completing the Fresno FIRE program. Understanding the ways in which the Fresno FIRE program supports healthy parenting relationships and financial stability is important for those providing services to at-risk fathers.

Publications & conference data

No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial. Completed trials usually publish results within 12-18 months.

Verify or expand the search:

Other trials of Primary Services

Trials testing the same drug.

Other recruiting trials for Fathers

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other Midwest Evaluation & Research trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

Verify against primary sources

Data sources for this page

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Primary sources · FDA · ClinicalTrials.gov · EMA · SEC EDGAR · ChEMBL · Wikidata · full sourcing