2016
DOI: 10.1542/peds.2015-3393
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Primary Care–Based Interventions to Promote Positive Parenting Behaviors: A Meta-analysis

Abstract: CONTEXT: Utilization of primary care settings offers a promising approach to enhance parenting practices that are critical for promoting early childhood development. Determining the impact of existing primary care interventions on key parenting behaviors will aid providers and policy makers as they seek strategies to improve early child outcomes. OBJECTIVE:To evaluate the efficacy of primary care-based interventions on parenting practices that promote early child development among children younger than 36 mont… Show more

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Cited by 103 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…Such interventions can provide parents with early support for handling challenging behaviors during the gap between diagnosis and securing services for the child. Additionally, brief interventions hold the potential to provide increased access to services for more clients, especially in the primary care setting (McMillin, Bultas, Wilmott, Grafeman, & Zand, 2015;Shah, Kennedy, Clark, Bauer, & Schwartz, 2016).…”
Section: Primary Care Stepping Stones Positive Parenting Programmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such interventions can provide parents with early support for handling challenging behaviors during the gap between diagnosis and securing services for the child. Additionally, brief interventions hold the potential to provide increased access to services for more clients, especially in the primary care setting (McMillin, Bultas, Wilmott, Grafeman, & Zand, 2015;Shah, Kennedy, Clark, Bauer, & Schwartz, 2016).…”
Section: Primary Care Stepping Stones Positive Parenting Programmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Specifically, the results of this study showed that lower parental self‐efficacy was associated directly with higher child aggression whereas perceived parental impact was related indirectly to higher child aggression during toddlerhood via positive engagement and child imitation. Interventions enhancing maternal beliefs and improving parenting behavior showed promising results (Roskam, Brassart, Loop, Mouton, & Schelstraete, ; Shah, Kennedy, Clark, Bauer, & Schwartz, ). Therefore, it may be important to combine the promotion of parental self‐efficacy and the awareness that parents have an impact on their child's development, with the improvement of parenting behavior in the prevention of aggressive behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, parents demonstrating use of authoritarian strategies when managing T1D might benefit from learning strategies that encourage a collaborative parent‐child approach to T1D self‐care. While we need future research to determine the level and intensity of intervention (eg, brief clinic‐based vs formal behavioral parenting programs), parenting style is modifiable and teaching parents positive strategies that also encourage high parent responsiveness all may help to guide parents to more authoritative‐like strategies . Also, if future research supports a relation between use of authoritarian strategies and parent distress or anxiety, then we should consider including cognitive‐behavioral strategies to help parents learn alternative strategies to manage their anxiety.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%