The Caregiving Composite Questionnaire (CCQ) is a 42-item questionnaire completed by parents/caregivers of children aged 0 to 6 years. It measures five parenting constructs that are important in reducing attachment insecurity and promoting attachment security in young children:
The CCQ is intended to provide clinicians with information about caregivers’ perceptions of their caregiving role and their thoughts and feelings about their child. It is not designed to categorise parent-child attachment relationships, but it provides important information about factors related to child attachment security that can inform the assessment process and help with treatment planning. The CCQ can also be used to monitor outcomes of attachment-based treatments that are focused on shifting the cognitive aspects of caregiving associated with attachment security.
Each scale of the CCQ is scored separately. A total score is not computed.
Normative percentiles are presented from a community sample of parents/caregivers of children aged between 1 and 4 (Byron & Hawkins, 2022). A percentile of 50 indicates that the individual’s scores are average when compared to other parents/caregivers.
A scaled score (out of 10) is presented for the Parental Mentalising subscales so that a comparison can be made between them (given there are different numbers of items between each one).
The CCQ is made up of 5 subscales selected from already validated measures that assess constructs associated with attachment security in young children. Subscales were selected because of their ease of administration and scoring and theoretical alignment with precursors of attachment relationships (Maxwell, McMahon, Huber, Reay et al., 2021). Original scale authors granted permission for each subscale to be included in this composite questionnaire. The information below shows the origins of questionnaire items and subscales. Questionnaire items aimed at parents of infants were reworded to be relevant for parents of children 0 – 6 years.
Parent self-efficacy. The initial TOPSE development study suggested good internal consistency of each subscale, with good internal consistency for the empathy (alpha = 0.89) and affection subcales (alpha = 0.81) in a sample of 63 parents of children 0 – 6 years (Kendall & Bloomfield, 2005). A systematic review of self-reported parenting self-efficacy measures also concluded that the TOPSE had good content validity and acceptable construct validity (Wittkowski et al., 2017).
Caregiving helplessness. The original scale development study revealed good factor structure for the measure’s three subscales in a sample of 208 mothers of children aged 3 – 11 years. The helpless subscale showed good internal consistency (alpha = 0.85), and convergent and divergent validity in a smaller subset of the larger sample (George & Solomon, 2011). Specifically, the helpless subscale was significantly related to helplessness ratings from interviews, and not significantly related to mothers’ stress levels in non-caregiving domains, such as stress about health. A subsequent validation study showed good internal consistency of the helpless subscale with mothers of infants (alpha = 0.80; Huth-Bocks, Guyon-Harris, Calvert, Scott & Harris, 2016), and good convergent validity with concurrent measures of maternal risk factors and infant problems. The helpless subscale was correlated with maternal BDI-II depression (r = 0.53), maternal PCL post-traumatic stress symptoms (r = 0.53), and infant problems as measured by the BITSEA (r = 0. 32).
Hostility. The hostility subscale was developed for use in the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC, 2006), which is a large, longitudinal study following the development of 10,000 children and families from all parts of Australia. It has shown good internal consistency, with H coefficients ranging from 0.85 to 0.92 across multiple waves of the LSAC (Giallo, Cooklin, Wade, D’Esposito, & Nicholson, 2013). It has also shown predictive validity with significant associations with child outcomes in major population-based studies.
Parental mentalising. The parent mentalising scale was developed and validated on a sample of 219 mothers of infants (Diamond, Caltabiano, Caltabiano, & Goodman, 2013). It showed acceptable internal consistency and evidence of convergent and divergent validity.
The CCQ was piloted for use as a tool for monitoring outcomes of attachment-based interventions in a non-randomized waitlist control trial examining the effectiveness of Circle of Security Parenting (Maxwell, McMahon, Huber, Reay et al., 2021). In this sample of 255 parents of children aged 0-6 years, internal consistency of all subscales was good (alphas ranged from 0.78 to 0.88). Associations among subscales aligned as expected, supporting convergent validity of the subscales. For example, hostility was positively correlated with caregiving helplessness (r = 0.56) and negatively with empathy (r = -0.40) and affection (r = -0.38); empathy was positively correlated with affection (r = 0.66); caregiving helplessness was negatively correlated with empathy (r = -0.57) and affection (r = -0.50); and parent mentalising was positively correlated with empathy (r = 0.45) and affection (r = 0.30). All subscales successfully differentiated treatment from waitlist control group in the study, and all were sensitive to change in the intervention group.
A study by Byron & Hawkins (2022) using the CCQ with a community sample of 80 parents/caregivers of children aged between 1 and 4 (mean age 2) found the following means (and standard deviations):
Percentiles are computed using percentile tables from Byron & Hawkins (2022), with the exception of the Affection scale, where simple mean and standard deviation were used to compute norms given data artefacts in the percentile table.
Byron B. & Hawkins E. (2022). [unpublished data].
Diamond, C. S., Caltabiano, N. J., Caltabiano, M., & Goodman, D. (2013). Maternal reflective function scale: the development of a scale for primary health care services. Archives of Women’s Mental Health, 16, 14-14.
Giallo, R., Cooklin, A., Wade, C., D’Esposito, F., & Nicholson, J. M. (2013). Maternal postnatal mental health and later emotional-behavioural development of children: The mediating role of parenting behaviour. Child: Care, Health and Development, 40(3), 327-336. https://doi.org/10.1111/cch.12028
George, C., & Solomon, J. (2011). Caregiving helplessness: The development of a screening measure for disorganized maternal caregiving. In J. Solomon & C. George (Eds.), Disorganized attachment and caregiving (pp. 133-166). New York: Guilford Press.
Huth-Bocks, A. C., Guyon-Harris, K., Calvert, M., Scott, S., & Ahlfs-Dunn, S. (2016). The caregiving helplessness questionnaire: Evidence for validity and utility with mothers of infants. Infant Mental Health Journal, 37(3), 208-221. https://doi.org/10.1002/imhj.21559
Kendall, S., & Bloomfield, L. (2005). Developing and validating a tool to measure parenting self-efficacy. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 51(2), 174-181. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2005.03479.x
Maxwell, AM., McMahon, C., Huber, A. et al. Examining the Effectiveness of Circle of Security Parenting (COS-P): A Multi-Site Non-Randomized Study with Waitlist Control. J Child Fam Stud 30, 1123–1140 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-021-01932-4
Wittkowski, A., Garrett, C., Calam, R., & Weisberg, D. (2017). Self-report measures of parental self-efficacy: A systematic review of the current literature. Journal of Child and Family Studies, 26(11), 2960-2978. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10826-017-0830-5
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