Parents' Consumer Preferences for Early Childhood Behavioral Intervention in Primary Care.

Andrew R. Riley, Bethany L. Walker, A. Wilson, Trevor A Hall, Elizabeth A. Stormshak, D. Cohen
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引用次数: 16

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Early childhood parenting interventions are increasingly delivered in primary care, but parental engagement with those interventions is often suboptimal. We sought to better understand parents' preferences for the content and delivery method of behavioral health guidance in pediatric primary care and to determine the relationship of those preferences with demographic characteristics, child behavior problems, and parenting style. METHODS Participants were 396 parents of young children recruited from primary care offices. We collected measures of parental preferences (including behavioral topics, intervention strategies, and methods of delivery) for behavioral intervention in primary care, child behavior symptoms, parenting style, and demographic characteristics. Descriptive statistics were used to identify parents' most preferred behavioral topics and intervention delivery methods. We used a hierarchical regression approach to determine whether parenting style predicted parents' preferences beyond demographic and child-level factors. RESULTS Nearly all parents (96%) endorsed a behavioral topic (e.g., aggression) as important. Most preferred to receive intervention during routine medical appointments. Child behavior problems correlated with parents' overall interest in behavioral guidance, but clinically significant symptoms did not differentiate interest in any single topic. Socioeconomic factors and negative parenting practices predicted some parental preferences. Notably, lax parenting generally predicted higher interest in behavioral intervention, whereas hostile and physically controlling parenting predicted lower interest. CONCLUSION Most parents are interested in behavioral guidance as part of primary care, but their preferences for the content and delivery of that guidance vary by known socioeconomic, child, and parenting risk factors. Tailoring intervention to parents' preferences may increase engagement with available interventions.
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初级保健中幼儿行为干预的家长消费偏好。
目的:早期儿童养育干预越来越多地在初级保健中提供,但父母参与这些干预往往是次优的。我们试图更好地了解父母对儿童初级保健行为健康指导内容和提供方法的偏好,并确定这些偏好与人口统计学特征、儿童行为问题和父母教养方式的关系。方法研究对象为396名来自初级保健办公室的幼儿家长。我们收集了父母对初级保健行为干预的偏好(包括行为主题、干预策略和分娩方法)、儿童行为症状、父母教养方式和人口统计学特征。使用描述性统计来确定家长最喜欢的行为主题和干预交付方式。我们使用层次回归方法来确定父母教养方式是否能预测父母的偏好,而不仅仅是人口统计学和儿童水平因素。结果几乎所有的家长(96%)都认为行为主题(如攻击性)很重要。大多数人倾向于在常规医疗预约期间接受干预。儿童行为问题与父母对行为指导的整体兴趣相关,但临床显著症状并不能区分对任何单一主题的兴趣。社会经济因素和消极的养育方式预测了父母的某些偏好。值得注意的是,宽松的父母通常会对行为干预产生更高的兴趣,而敌意和身体控制的父母则会对行为干预产生更低的兴趣。结论:大多数家长对作为初级保健一部分的行为指导感兴趣,但他们对指导内容和方式的偏好因已知的社会经济、儿童和育儿风险因素而异。根据家长的喜好定制干预措施可能会增加对现有干预措施的参与。
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