12 research outputs found
Parenting Intervention and the Prevention of Serious Mental Health Problems in Children
The reduction of coercive or inadequate parenting is essential if the mental health status of Australian children and adolescents is to be improved. Of the available approaches that address parenting practices, behavioural family interventions have the strongest empirical support and are effective in reducing parenting practices that contribute to the development of behavioural and emotional problems in children. However, only a small proportion of parents access such interventions. A comprehensive multilevel, evidence-based parenting and family support strategy needs to be implemented on a wide scale to reduce the prevalence of mental health problems in children and youth. The Triple P â Positive Parenting Program is an example of a population-level strategy that can be used to improve the mental health status of children and their parents
Explaining the complex impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on children with overweight and obesity : a comparative ecological analysis of parentsâ perceptions in three countries
Background
The Covid-19 pandemic has changed childrenâs eating and physical activity behaviours. These changes have been positive for some households and negative for others, revealing health inequalities that have ramifications for childhood obesity. This study investigates the pandemicâs impact on families of children aged 2â6âyears with overweight or obesity.
Methods
Drawing on interviews conducted as part of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) for childhood obesity, thematic analysis was used to examine how parents of pre-schoolers perceived changes in their eating, screentime and physical activity behaviours between the first and second waves of Covid-19. Parents (n =â70, representing 68 families) were interviewed twice during a period of 6âmonths in three countries with markedly different pandemic policies â Sweden, Romania, and Spain. The analysis is informed by Bronfenbrennerâs ecological systems theory, which embeds home- and school-based influences within societal and policy contexts.
Results
The findings show that, although all participants were recruited from an RCT for families of children with excess weight, they reported different responses to the pandemicâs second wave, with some children engaging in healthier eating and physical activity, and others engaging in comfort eating and a more sedentary lifestyle. Differences in childrenâs obesity-related behaviours were closely related to differences in parentsâ practices, which were, in turn, linked to their emotional and social wellbeing. Notably, across all sites, parentsâ feeding and physical activity facilitation practices, as well as their emotional and social wellbeing, were embedded in household resilience. In resilient households, where parents had secure housing and employment, they were better able to adapt to the challenges posed by the pandemic, whereas parents who experienced household insecurity found it more difficult to cope.
Conclusions
As the Covid-19 pandemic is turning into a long-term public health challenge, studies that address household resilience are crucial for developing effective prevention and treatment responses to childhood obesity
An analysis of training, generalization, and maintenance effects of Primary Care Triple P for parents of preschool-aged children with disruptive behavior
A brief primary care intervention for parents of preschool-aged children with disruptive behavior was assessed using a multiple probe design. Primary Care Triple P, a four session behavioral intervention was sequentially introduced within a multiple probe format to each of 9 families to a total of 10 children aged between 3 and 7 years (males = 4, females = 6). Independent observations of parent-child interaction in the home revealed that the intervention was associated with lower levels of child disruptive behavior both in a target training setting and in various generalization settings. Parent report data also confirmed there were significant reductions in intensity and frequency of disruptive behavior, an increase in task specific parental self-efficacy, improved scores on the Parent Experience Survey, and high levels of consumer satisfaction. All short-term intervention effects were maintained at four-month follow-up. Implications for the delivery of brief interventions to prevent conduct problems are discussed