TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaborative development of a scoping review protocol to map instruments assessing the parent–infant relationship
T2 - An International Initiative from COST Action TREASURE
AU - Brandão, Sónia
AU - Talmon, Anat
AU - Gieysztor, Ewa
AU - Souto, Patrícia
AU - Soares Goncalves, Andreia
AU - Silva, Rosa
AU - Gonçalves, Patrícia
AU - Prata, Paula
AU - Şensoy, Özlem
AU - Ardahan Akgül, Esra
AU - Pinar, Semra
AU - Uriko, Kristiina
AU - Ardahan Sevgili, Seda
AU - Bulut, Elif
AU - Shigdel, Rajesh
AU - Gülaldı, Demet
AU - Freitas, Otília
AU - Onel, Aycin Ezgi
AU - Dikmen-Yildiz, Pelin
AU - Power, Carmen
AU - Lochmannová, Alena
AU - d'Orsi, Dora
AU - Koç, Özlem
AU - Sönmez, Tuğçe
AU - Brandão, Tânia
AU - Azevedo, Diana
AU - Miloseva, Lence
AU - Tar Bolacali, Edanur
AU - Aksoy, Bahar
AU - Markaj, Mirlinda
AU - Sousa, Gilberta
AU - Kömürcü Akik, Burcu
AU - Carone, Nicola
AU - Gencpinar, Pinar
AU - Demir Yıldırım, Ayça
AU - Özdemir Koyu, Hazal
AU - Abreu, Wilson
AU - Yılmaz Esencan, Tuğba
AU - Reis Santos, Margarida
AU - Santos, Mario
AU - Can, Remziye
AU - Zietlow, Anna Lena
AU - Caparros-Gonzalez, Rafael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: © 2026 Brandão S et al.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Early relational health during the first 24 months of life is a key determinant of child development and wellbeing. During this postnatal period, the parent–infant relationship plays a central role in emotional regulation, bonding, and developmental trajectories. Although the broader early relational health framework encompasses the first 1,000 days of life, this scoping review focuses specifically on the postnatal phase, where parent–infant interactions are directly observable and measurable. However, existing assessment instruments vary widely in their conceptual focus, scope, and characteristics, and no comprehensive review has systematically mapped tools used to assess the parent–infant relationship during early infancy. In response to this gap, a transdisciplinary working group within the COST Action CA22114 – TREASURE collaboratively developed a scoping review protocol to systematically map instruments assessing the parent–infant relationship from birth to 24 months of age. This Brief Report describes the collaborative methodological process underpinning the protocol’s development. The process followed an iterative, consensus-driven approach involving multidisciplinary experts from multiple COST member countries. Through structured online meetings, the group clarified core constructs and established the age range using the Population–Concept–Context (PCC) framework. The JBI methodology for scoping reviews was adopted and aligned with PRISMA-ScR standards to ensure transparency and reproducibility. Progressive drafting, internal peer review, and iterative refinement led to the final protocol, which was registered on the Open Science Framework (DOI: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/HRVX9 10.17605/OSF.IO/HRVX9).The resulting protocol provides a replicable methodological framework for mapping instruments that assess the parent–infant relationship in the first two years of life. This Brief Report presents a framework for collaborative protocol development in international research networks, promoting shared knowledge generation in early relational health research and offering potential applicability to other COST initiatives.
AB - Early relational health during the first 24 months of life is a key determinant of child development and wellbeing. During this postnatal period, the parent–infant relationship plays a central role in emotional regulation, bonding, and developmental trajectories. Although the broader early relational health framework encompasses the first 1,000 days of life, this scoping review focuses specifically on the postnatal phase, where parent–infant interactions are directly observable and measurable. However, existing assessment instruments vary widely in their conceptual focus, scope, and characteristics, and no comprehensive review has systematically mapped tools used to assess the parent–infant relationship during early infancy. In response to this gap, a transdisciplinary working group within the COST Action CA22114 – TREASURE collaboratively developed a scoping review protocol to systematically map instruments assessing the parent–infant relationship from birth to 24 months of age. This Brief Report describes the collaborative methodological process underpinning the protocol’s development. The process followed an iterative, consensus-driven approach involving multidisciplinary experts from multiple COST member countries. Through structured online meetings, the group clarified core constructs and established the age range using the Population–Concept–Context (PCC) framework. The JBI methodology for scoping reviews was adopted and aligned with PRISMA-ScR standards to ensure transparency and reproducibility. Progressive drafting, internal peer review, and iterative refinement led to the final protocol, which was registered on the Open Science Framework (DOI: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/HRVX9 10.17605/OSF.IO/HRVX9).The resulting protocol provides a replicable methodological framework for mapping instruments that assess the parent–infant relationship in the first two years of life. This Brief Report presents a framework for collaborative protocol development in international research networks, promoting shared knowledge generation in early relational health research and offering potential applicability to other COST initiatives.
KW - parent–infant relationship; early relational health; scoping review; methodological framework; collaborative research; international collaboration; COST Action
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105028004394
U2 - 10.12688/openreseurope.21700.2
DO - 10.12688/openreseurope.21700.2
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C2 - 41568255
AN - SCOPUS:105028004394
SN - 2732-5121
VL - 5
JO - Open Research Europe
JF - Open Research Europe
M1 - 394
ER -