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Cited by 22 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
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“…22 These results show that prevalence of psychiatric distress decreased during these years among Iranian adolescents, aged 10 to 18 years. The prevalence of psychiatric distress in Brazil, South Africa, and India among adolescents were 13%, 25 15%, 26 and 13%, 27 respectively. Our results showed that Iranian adolescents had psychiatric distress as frequent as other less-industrialized countries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…22 These results show that prevalence of psychiatric distress decreased during these years among Iranian adolescents, aged 10 to 18 years. The prevalence of psychiatric distress in Brazil, South Africa, and India among adolescents were 13%, 25 15%, 26 and 13%, 27 respectively. Our results showed that Iranian adolescents had psychiatric distress as frequent as other less-industrialized countries.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…However, small wait-list controlled trials with Chinese and Korean American parents suggests that PT can be delivered with efficacy for these immigrant groups (Kim, Cain & Webster-Stratton, 2008; Lau et al, in preparation). International trials involving Chinese parents in Hong Kong and Australia have likewise demonstrated efficacy of PT (e.g., Crisante & Ng, 2003; Ho et al, 1999; Leung, Sanders, Leung, Mak & Lau, 2003; Leung, Tsang, Heung & Yiu, 2009). Given this level of research support, PT is among the most well established treatments for Chinese families, and as such could be considered a first-line treatment to address childhood externalizing disorders among Chinese-origin families.…”
Section: Parent Training With Asian Americansmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…This may be attributable to difficulty “buying into” culturally unfamiliar techniques or requiring more practice to master novel skills. Ho and colleagues (1999) noted that once initial resistance to using praise was overcome, there was still considerable difficulty in teaching Hong Kong Chinese parents to praise their children. They found it necessary to bolster their instruction with the use of videotaped feedback and immediate reinforcement with live coaching.…”
Section: Parent Training With Asian Americansmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Parents objected to tangible rewards for compliance because of Confucian edicts that child compliance is a key filial obligation, not a contractual arrangement. Likewise, other interventionists have noted that praise is problematic for Chinese parents owing to beliefs that praising children for accomplishments will result in lack of humility, complacence, and decreased effort to do better (Crisante & Ng, 2003; Ho et al, 1999). Among Chinese-American immigrants, low levels of acculturation and endorsement of traditional Chinese child-rearing values concerning strict discipline and shaming are associated with lower…”
Section: Engagement In Pt Among Chinese Parentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although trials of Chinese parents in Hong Kong indicate that PT is efficacious in the treatment of child conduct problems (Ho et al, 1999; Leung, Sanders, Leung, Mak, & Lau, 2003), efficacy research has not included Chinese immigrants, who represent the second largest immigrant group in the United States. In the current study, we used mixed methods to examine PT outcomes in this target group and to report therapist-observed barriers in PT implementation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%