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1.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-223619

ABSTRACT

En este trabajo queremos exponer un modelo terapéutico para tratar a aquellos adolescentes quese resisten a cambiar con los abordajes terapéuticos normales. Son adolescentes que no tienen resuelta su au-tonomía personal, su diferenciación self-objeto. Para ayudar al adolescente primero tenemos que resolver suindiferenciación, su dependencia con los padres. Cuando se haya diferenciado de ellos, podrá hacerse cargo desus problemas personales.(AU)


In this paper we wantto expose a therapeutic model to treat those adolescents who resist to change with the normal therapeuticapproaches. They are adolescents who have not resolved their personal autonomy, their self-object differen-tiation. To help the adolescent we must first resolve their indifferentiation, their dependence on their parents.When they have differentiated themselves from their parents, they will be able to take charge of their personalproblems.(AU)


En aquest treball volem presentar un model terapèutic per tractar aquells adolescents que es resisteixena canviar amb els abordatges terapèutics normals. Són adolescents que no tenen resolta la seva autonomiapersonal, la seva diferenciació self-objecte. Per ajudar l'adolescent, primer hem de resoldre la indiferenciació ila dependència amb els pares. Quan se n'hagi diferenciat, es podrà fer càrrec dels seus problemes personals.(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Child , Feeding and Eating Disorders of Childhood , Child Psychiatry , Child Development , Psychotherapy , Parenting , Psychology, Child , Child Health , Psychopathology
2.
Infant Ment Health J ; 44(3): 301-318, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36917197

ABSTRACT

Attachment-based home visiting programs that serve new mothers experiencing psychological distress may advance health equity by helping families systemically exposed to adversity. This study examined whether one such program (Promoting First Relationships/PFR) had particularly beneficial effects on maternal and child relationship outcomes for mothers reporting the greatest psychological distress. A randomized controlled trial of the PFR program included a low-income sample of 252 Spanish- and English-speaking mother-child dyads referred prenatally for mental health concerns. The sample of mothers was 65.5% White, 17.5% Black, and 17.1% multiracial or other racial groups; 47.2% reported Hispanic ethnicity. The moderating variable of psychological distress was measured using maternal-reported screening tools for symptoms of depression, anxiety, anger, post-traumatic stress, and interpersonal sensitivity. Outcomes included observed parenting sensitivity and self-reported understanding of infants/toddlers, caregiving confidence, and child externalizing behavior. Results showed a significant treatment condition by baseline psychological distress interaction for observed parenting sensitivity such that differences in outcomes favoring the PFR condition were greatest among those with high baseline psychological distress (baseline child age 6-12 weeks). In a low-income sample of new mothers, those with the greatest need, as indicated by high psychological distress, showed greater improvements in their sensitive and responsive caregiving if they were randomized to the PFR treatment condition.


Los programas de visita a casa basados en la afectividad que sirven a madres nuevas que experimentan angustia sicológica pudieran mejorar la equidad de salud ayudando a familias sistemáticamente expuestas a circunstancias adversas. Este estudio examinó si uno de tales programas (Promover Primeras Relaciones /PFR) tiene particularmente efectos beneficiosos en los resultados de la relación materna y del niño para madres que reportan la mayor angustia sicológica. Un ensayo controlado al azar sobre el programa PFR incluyó un grupo muestra de bajos recursos económicos de 252 díadas de madre-niño que hablaban español o inglés, referidas prenatalmente por razón de salud mental. El grupo muestra de madres estaba compuesto de 65.5% blancas, 17.5% negras, y 17.1% multirracial o de otros grupos raciales; el 47.2% reportó origen étnico hispano. La variable moderadora de angustia sicológica se midió con herramientas de detección reportadas por las madres para síntomas de depresión, ansiedad, ira, estrés postraumático y sensibilidad interpersonal. Entre los resultados se incluyen la observada sensibilidad de crianza y la auto-reportada comprensión de infantes y niños pequeñitos, la confianza en la prestación de cuidado, así como la conducta de externalización del niño. Los resultados muestran una significativa condición de tratamiento por medio de interacción de angustia sicológica al nivel básico para la observada sensibilidad de crianza, de manera que las diferencias en resultados que favorecen la condición PFR fueron mayores entre quienes presentaban una alta angustia sicológica de base (punto base edad del niño 6 a 12 semanas). En un grupo muestra de madres nuevas de bajos recursos económicos, aquellas con las mayores necesidades, tal como indica la alta angustia sicológica, mostraron mayores logros en su sensibilidad y el cuidado sensible si se les había seleccionado al azar para la condición de tratamiento PFR.


Les programmes de visite à domicile basés sur l'attachement qui servant des nouvelles mères faisant l'expérience de détresse psychologique peuvent faire avancer l'équité en santé en aidant des familles systématiquement exposées à l'adversité. Cette étude a examiné si un tel programme (la Promotion de Premières Relations, soit en anglais Promoting First Relationships/PFR) avait des effets particulièrement bénéfiques sur les résultats de relation maternelle et enfant pour les mères faisant état de la plus grande détresse psychologique. Un essai contrôlé randomisé du programme PFR a inclus un échantillon de 252 dyades mères-enfants de milieu défavorisé, parlant espagnol et anglais, référées avant la naissance pour des problèmes de santé mentale. L'échantillon de mères était 65,5% caucasiennes/blanches, 17,5% noires, and 17,1% multiraciales ou autres groupes raciaux, 47,2% faisant état d'une ethnicité hispanique. La variable modératrice de détresse psychologique a été mesurée en utilisant des outils de dépistage rapportés par la mère de dépression, d'anxiété, de stress post-traumatique, et de sensibilité interpersonnelle. Les résultats ont inclus une sensibilité de parentage observée et une compréhension auto-rapportée des bébés/petits enfants, une confiance de parentage, et un comportement externalisant de l'enfant. Les résultats montrent une condition de traitement importante par l'interaction psychologique de base pour la sensibilité de parentage observée telles que les différences dans les résultats favorisant la condition PFR étaient les plus grandes parmi celles avec la base de détresse psychologique élevée (âge de base de l'enfant 6-12 semaines). Chez un échantillon de nouvelles mères de milieux défavorisés, celles ayant le besoin le plus élevé, indiqué par une haute détresse psychologique, ont fait preuve des plus améliorations dans leur parentage sensible et réactif si elles étaient randomisées pour la condition de traitement PFR.


Subject(s)
Mothers , Parenting , Infant , Female , Humans , Mothers/psychology , Parenting/psychology , Anxiety/psychology , House Calls
3.
Transl Behav Med ; 13(1): 34-41, 2023 01 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36227860

ABSTRACT

Promoting First Relationship (PFR) is an evidence-based intervention designed to promote positive, supportive relationships between primary caregivers and their young children. Implementing and testing the efficacy of PFR in a remote Native community is especially challenging and requires methods and tools for ensuring implementation fidelity. Tribal members of a Native community were successfully trained and certified to deliver PFR by university-based personnel. During PFR delivery, they achieved very high scores on adherence to intervention content (M = 0.99, SD = 0.02), and their quality of delivery uniformly exceeded established criteria. High attrition occurred before PFR was delivered. However, participants who remained in the study completed all 10 sessions of PFR content. Participants' satisfaction with the program was very high (M = 3.90 [of 4 points], SD = 0.19). High implementation fidelity was attained in the face of many inherent challenges. The suite of methods and tools used for training, monitoring, and evaluating implementation fidelity in this study provides an example that may be useful in the evaluation of evidence-based programs more generally.


Subject(s)
Counseling , Child , Humans , Child, Preschool , Program Evaluation/methods
4.
Prev Sci ; 24(1): 39-49, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35997845

ABSTRACT

This study tested the effectiveness of Promoting First Relationships® (PFR), a preventive intervention program aimed at fostering positive caregiver-child relationships in Native families living on a rural reservation. Participants were 162 primary caregivers (96% Native; 93% female) and their Native toddlers (10-31 months old; 50% female). Families were randomized to a PFR group (n = 81) or Resource and Referral (RR) control group (n = 81), after baseline data collection (Time 1) to assess the quality of caregiver-child interaction, caregiver knowledge about children's social-emotional needs, caregiver depressive symptoms, and child externalizing behavior. After delivery of the PFR intervention or the RR service, follow-up assessments were repeated immediately post-intervention (Time 2) and 3 months later (Time 3). After controlling for baseline assessments, multivariate analyses of covariance revealed that caregivers in the PFR group had significantly higher scores on knowledge about children's social-emotional needs at Time 2 (p < .01, η2 = .06) and Time 3 (p < .05, η2 = .04) and less severe depressive symptoms at Times 2 and 3 (both p < .05, η2 = .04). At Time 3, the quality of caregiver-child interaction was better in the PFR group (p < .01, η2 = .06), an effect that was moderated by severity of depressive symptoms (p = .05, η2 = .06), with PFR having the greatest impact at low levels of initial symptoms (p = .02). Results support the positive impact of PFR in a Native community and suggest conditions under which the intervention may be most effective.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Parent-Child Relations , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Caregivers/psychology , Indians, North American , Rural Population
5.
Child Abuse Negl ; 106: 104515, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32454356

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Child abuse and neglect (CAN) cost United States society $136 billion to $428 billion annually. Preventive interventions that reduce CAN may improve people's lives and generate economic benefits to society, but their magnitude is likely to vary greatly with assumptions about victim costs avoided through intervention. OBJECTIVE: We examined the implications of different assumptions about avoided victim costs in a benefit-cost analysis of Promoting First Relationships® (PFR), a 10-session attachment and strengths-based home visiting intervention. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: Participants were 247 child protection-involved but intact families in Washington State randomized to receive PFR (n = 124) or resource and referral (n = 123). METHODS: We monetized intervention effects on out-of-home placements and implicit effects on CAN and calculated net present values under three scenarios: (1) benefits from avoided system costs, (2) additional benefits from avoided tangible victim costs, and (3) additional benefits from avoided tangible and intangible quality-of-life victim costs. For scenarios 2 and 3, we varied the CAN effect size and estimated the effect size at which PFR was reliably cost beneficial. RESULTS: PFR's societal net benefit ranged from $1 (scenario 1) to $5514 - $25,562 (scenario 2) and $7004 - $32,072 (scenario 3) (2014 USD). In scenarios 2 and 3, PFR was reliably cost beneficial at a CAN effect size of approximately -0.25. CONCLUSIONS: PFR is cost beneficial assuming tangible victim costs are avoided by PFR. Research into the long-term health and economic consequences of reducing CAN in at-risk populations would contribute to comprehensive, accurate benefits models.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/economics , Child Abuse/prevention & control , Child Protective Services/economics , Child Protective Services/methods , Cost-Benefit Analysis , Adult , Caregivers/economics , Child, Preschool , Crime Victims/economics , Female , Humans , Male , Washington
6.
Prev Sci ; 21(1): 98-108, 2020 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31754964

ABSTRACT

Preventive intervention programs that address parenting practices and children's developmental needs early in life have led to positive changes in caregiving behavior and children's developmental outcomes. However, little is known about the efficacy of such programs among American Indian families. This study tested the efficacy of the strengths-based Promoting First Relationships® (PFR) program in American Indian families living on a rural reservation. Participants were 34 toddlers (10-30 months old) and their primary caregivers. Families were randomized to an Immediate (n = 17) or Waitlist (n = 17) group after a home visit for baseline data collection, which included assessment of observed caregiver-child interactions, caregiver perceptions, and child behavior. After randomization, we delivered the PFR intervention in 10 visits to the Immediate group, with some adaptations based on focus groups with community members and staff input. We analyzed follow-up assessments by implementing multiple regression analyses, controlling for baseline scores and using multiple imputation to handle missing data. Results supported our primary hypotheses: the Immediate group, compared with Waitlist, had significantly higher scores on the quality (p = .011, d = 1.02) and contingent responsiveness (p = .013, d = 1.21) of caregiver-child interactions, as well as on caregiver knowledge of toddlers' social and emotional needs and level of developmentally appropriate expectations (p = .000, d = 0.58). Caregiver stress and caregivers' reports of child behavior did not differ significantly. Our results hold promise for additional PFR research in other Native communities.


Subject(s)
American Indian or Alaska Native , Caregivers , Child Development , Parent-Child Relations , Child Behavior , Child, Preschool , Female , Focus Groups , House Calls , Humans , Infant , Male , Rural Population
7.
Matern Child Health J ; 22(3): 376-383, 2018 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29139056

ABSTRACT

Introduction Implementation fidelity is a challenge for the adoption of evidence-based programs within social service broadly and child welfare specifically. However, implementation fidelity is critical for maintaining the integrity of clinical trials and for ensuring successful delivery of services in public health settings. Methods Promoting First Relationships ® (PFR), a 10-week home visiting parenting intervention, was evaluated in two randomized clinical trials with populations of families in child welfare. Seven providers from community agencies participated in the trials and administered PFR. Fidelity data collected included observational measures of provider behavior, provider records, and input from clients to assess training uptake, adherence to content, quality of delivery, program dosage, and participant satisfaction. Results In mock cases to assess training uptake, providers demonstrated an increase in PFR verbalization strategies and a decrease non-PFR verbalizations from pre to post PFR training, and overall this was maintained a year later (Mann-Whitney U's = 0, p's < .01). Adherence to content in actual cases was high, with M = 97% of the program elements completed. Quality of delivery varied across providers, indicated by PFR consultation strategies (Wilks' Lambda F = 18.24, df = 15, p < .001) and global ratings (F = 13.35, df = 5, p < .001). Program dosage was high in both trials (71 and 86% receiving 10 sessions), and participant satisfaction was high (M = 3.9, SD = 0.2; 4 = greater satisfaction). Discussion This system of training and monitoring provides an example of procedures that can be used effectively to achieve implementation fidelity with evidence-based programs in social service practice.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Home Care Services/standards , House Calls , Program Evaluation/methods , Quality Assurance, Health Care , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic , Child , Child Health Services/organization & administration , Child Health Services/standards , Female , Home Care Services/organization & administration , Humans
8.
Autism Res ; 10(5): 961-972, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28244271

ABSTRACT

Prospective longitudinal studies of infants with older siblings with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have indicated that differences in the neurocognitive systems underlying social attention may emerge prior to the child meeting ASD diagnostic criteria. Thus, targeting social attention with early intervention might have the potential to alter developmental trajectories for infants at high risk for ASD. Electrophysiological and habituation measures of social attention were collected at 6, 12, and 18 months in a group of high-risk infant siblings of children with ASD (N = 33). Between 9 and 11 months of age, infant siblings received a parent-delivered intervention, promoting first relationships (PFR), (n = 19) or on-going assessment without intervention (n = 14). PFR has been previously shown to increase parental responsivity to infant social communicative cues and infant contingent responding. Compared to infants who only received assessment and monitoring, infants who received the intervention showed improvements in neurocognitive metrics of social attention, as reflected in a greater reduction in habituation times to face versus object stimuli between 6 and 12 months, maintained at 18 months; a greater increase in frontal EEG theta power between 6 and 12 months; and a more comparable P400 response to faces and objects at 12 months. The high-risk infants who received the intervention showed a pattern of responses that appeared closer to the normative responses of two groups of age-matched low-risk control participants. Though replication is necessary, these results suggest that early parent-mediated intervention has the potential to impact the brain systems underpinning social attention in infants at familial risk for ASD. Autism Res 2017, 10: 961-972. © 2017 International Society for Autism Research, Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Subject(s)
Autism Spectrum Disorder/physiopathology , Early Intervention, Educational/methods , Electroencephalography/methods , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/physiology , Parents , Social Behavior , Attention , Autism Spectrum Disorder/diagnosis , Autism Spectrum Disorder/therapy , Female , Humans , Infant , Male , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors , Siblings
9.
Child Youth Serv Rev ; 61: 109-116, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26869740

ABSTRACT

Birth parents, once reunified with their child after a foster care placement, are in need of in-home support services to prevent reoccurrence of maltreatment and reentry into foster care, establish a strong relationship with their child, and enhance child well-being. Few studies have addressed the efficacy of home visiting services for reunified birth parents of toddlers. This study reports on the findings from a randomized control trial of a 10-week home visiting program, Promoting First Relationships® (Kelly, Sandoval, Zuckerman, & Buehlman, 2008), for a subsample of 43 reunified birth parents that were part of the larger trial. We describe how the elements of the intervention align with the needs of parents and children in child welfare. Although the sample size was small and most of the estimates of intervention effects were not statistically significant, the effect sizes and the pattern of results suggest that the intervention may have improved both observed parenting sensitivity and observed child behaviors as well as decreased parent report of child behavior problems. Implications are that providing in-home services soon after a reunification may be efficacious in strengthening birth parents' capacity to respond sensitively to their children as well as improving child social and emotional outcomes and well-being.

10.
Infant Ment Health J ; 34(3)2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24319304

ABSTRACT

Toddlers in child welfare often have a dysregulated stress response. We tested whether toddlers with caregivers randomized to a 10-week attachment-based intervention, Promoting First Relationships (PFR; Kelly, Sandoval, Zuckerman, & Buehlman, 2008) would show post-intervention change in stimulated salivary cortisol patterns during a research home visit involving a separation-reunion procedure, compared to a condition including child development and resource advice, but no attachment strategies. At baseline and post intervention, toddlers with a caregiver change within 7 weeks of enrollment (n=48, age 10-25 months) provided 4 saliva samples during a 1.5-hour research visit, and samples the next morning. The categorical dependent variable was the pattern of cortisol activity during the course of the post-intervention research visit: Flat, Decreasing, Increasing. Multinomial logistic regression was used to test for post-intervention group differences in cortisol patterns, controlling for time of day, child's age, morning cortisol level, and baseline cortisol pattern. At baseline and post-intervention 92% of children demonstrated atypically low morning cortisol (< .21 ig/dL); Post-intervention, Flat, Decreasing and Increasing patterns were exhibited by 70%, 15%, and 15% of the sample, respectively. Significantly more children in the PFR condition showed an Increasing pattern. This may signal an intervention effect on separation-based stress response physiology.

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