Bringing parenting interventions back to the future: how randomized microtrials may benefit parenting intervention efficacy
Bringing parenting interventions back to the future: how randomized microtrials may benefit parenting intervention efficacy
A novel approach is needed to promote the efficacy of parenting interventions designed to improve children's mental health. The proposed approach bridges developmental and intervention science to test which intervention elements contribute to parenting intervention program efficacy. The approach encourages the field to move “back to the future” using stringent, focused experimental techniques to test discrete parenting techniques (e.g., praise, time-out) on their merit. We argue that these randomized microtrials are needed to (a) distinguish between the less and more efficacious elements of parenting interventions, (b) illuminate for whom and under what conditions elements are efficacious, and (c) explore the potential for empirically supported tailoring of interventions to meet families’ specific needs.
evidence-based intervention, microtrials, parenting intervention efficacy, randomized controlled trials
47-57
Leijten, Patty
ce13ff90-250d-42ca-8dcb-37629c6e0286
Dishion, Thomas J.
f72472db-2090-4619-851a-a4181a05742b
Thomaes, Sander
ec762bc3-0df4-42c3-99f4-1a7b65f55053
Raaijmakers, Maartje A.J.
e33983db-99b8-49c7-af10-8e61404363e7
Orobio de Castro, Bram
ffd0ea77-8182-4d7c-9a07-0fe7704d8d95
Matthys, Walter
e6b1bb43-bc76-4335-bf31-5d7ccb584a00
March 2015
Leijten, Patty
ce13ff90-250d-42ca-8dcb-37629c6e0286
Dishion, Thomas J.
f72472db-2090-4619-851a-a4181a05742b
Thomaes, Sander
ec762bc3-0df4-42c3-99f4-1a7b65f55053
Raaijmakers, Maartje A.J.
e33983db-99b8-49c7-af10-8e61404363e7
Orobio de Castro, Bram
ffd0ea77-8182-4d7c-9a07-0fe7704d8d95
Matthys, Walter
e6b1bb43-bc76-4335-bf31-5d7ccb584a00
Leijten, Patty, Dishion, Thomas J., Thomaes, Sander, Raaijmakers, Maartje A.J., Orobio de Castro, Bram and Matthys, Walter
(2015)
Bringing parenting interventions back to the future: how randomized microtrials may benefit parenting intervention efficacy.
Clinical Psychology Science and Practice, 22 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/cpsp.12087).
Abstract
A novel approach is needed to promote the efficacy of parenting interventions designed to improve children's mental health. The proposed approach bridges developmental and intervention science to test which intervention elements contribute to parenting intervention program efficacy. The approach encourages the field to move “back to the future” using stringent, focused experimental techniques to test discrete parenting techniques (e.g., praise, time-out) on their merit. We argue that these randomized microtrials are needed to (a) distinguish between the less and more efficacious elements of parenting interventions, (b) illuminate for whom and under what conditions elements are efficacious, and (c) explore the potential for empirically supported tailoring of interventions to meet families’ specific needs.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 22 October 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 March 2015
Published date: March 2015
Keywords:
evidence-based intervention, microtrials, parenting intervention efficacy, randomized controlled trials
Organisations:
Psychology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 377812
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377812
ISSN: 0969-5893
PURE UUID: f1da899c-2ff9-4d82-a290-63bf1cc098ed
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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2015 12:24
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:10
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Contributors
Author:
Patty Leijten
Author:
Thomas J. Dishion
Author:
Sander Thomaes
Author:
Maartje A.J. Raaijmakers
Author:
Bram Orobio de Castro
Author:
Walter Matthys
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