Using video feedback to improve early father–infant interaction: a pilot study
Using video feedback to improve early father–infant interaction: a pilot study
Preventive interventions with parents of infants have tended to focus on mothers. Recent research focused on fathers suggests that their involvement in interventions might enhance effectiveness. One effective approach with mothers is the brief, home-based Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting (VIPP). This paper is a report of a pilot study of VIPP with fathers to assess its feasibility.
Five fathers were recruited from an existing longitudinal study of parents. The primary outcome was acceptability, assessed using a semi-structured questionnaire after completion of the intervention.
All fathers completed all sessions of the intervention. Fathers rated the intervention as having had a significant impact on their understanding of their child’s thoughts and feelings, and as having improved their communication and relationship with their baby. Fathers’ feedback was generally positive. The flexibility to conduct sessions at home (or at fathers’ places of work) and the flexible timing of sessions were identified as fundamental to successful delivery.
The results of this pilot study are encouraging, as VIPP with fathers was feasible. In light of the modest sample size, and the use of a non-clinical sample, the intervention must be evaluated with larger, clinical samples to evaluate its efficacy with fathers
61-71
Lawrence, Peter
0d45e107-38ef-4932-aec1-504573de01ef
Davies, Beverley
5720413d-533e-4711-b680-73aba1a6f107
Ramchandani, Paul
500a69b5-3a44-4275-b9cb-f4d36c64f5c0
January 2013
Lawrence, Peter
0d45e107-38ef-4932-aec1-504573de01ef
Davies, Beverley
5720413d-533e-4711-b680-73aba1a6f107
Ramchandani, Paul
500a69b5-3a44-4275-b9cb-f4d36c64f5c0
Lawrence, Peter, Davies, Beverley and Ramchandani, Paul
(2013)
Using video feedback to improve early father–infant interaction: a pilot study.
Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 18 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/1359104512437210).
(PMID:22434935)
Abstract
Preventive interventions with parents of infants have tended to focus on mothers. Recent research focused on fathers suggests that their involvement in interventions might enhance effectiveness. One effective approach with mothers is the brief, home-based Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting (VIPP). This paper is a report of a pilot study of VIPP with fathers to assess its feasibility.
Five fathers were recruited from an existing longitudinal study of parents. The primary outcome was acceptability, assessed using a semi-structured questionnaire after completion of the intervention.
All fathers completed all sessions of the intervention. Fathers rated the intervention as having had a significant impact on their understanding of their child’s thoughts and feelings, and as having improved their communication and relationship with their baby. Fathers’ feedback was generally positive. The flexibility to conduct sessions at home (or at fathers’ places of work) and the flexible timing of sessions were identified as fundamental to successful delivery.
The results of this pilot study are encouraging, as VIPP with fathers was feasible. In light of the modest sample size, and the use of a non-clinical sample, the intervention must be evaluated with larger, clinical samples to evaluate its efficacy with fathers
Text
61.short
- Accepted Manuscript
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Published date: January 2013
Organisations:
Psychology
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Local EPrints ID: 361699
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/361699
ISSN: 1359-1045
PURE UUID: 15302ea8-a375-4116-aaaf-75a89dbb2d30
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Date deposited: 31 Jan 2014 11:15
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:49
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Author:
Beverley Davies
Author:
Paul Ramchandani
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