Longer-Term Outcomes of the Incredible Years Parenting Intervention
DISORDER
Conduct Disorder
Parents
330
Parenting intervention
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIALS
150
Longer-term effects
Article
CHILD-BEHAVIOR
12. Responsible consumption
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
PROGRAM
Humans
Conduct problems
METAANALYSIS
Problem Behavior
Broader benefits
Parenting
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
ANTISOCIAL-BEHAVIOR
OPPOSITIONAL DEFIANT
3. Good health
CONDUCT PROBLEMS
PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
Multi-informant
FOLLOW-UP
Incredible years
DOI:
10.1007/s11121-020-01176-6
Publication Date:
2020-10-27T14:02:55Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
AbstractConduct problems can develop into behavior disorders and put children at risk for other mental health problems. Parenting interventions have been shown to successfully reduce conduct problems and are often expected to prevent the development of broader mental health problems. Few studies have evaluated the longer-term and broader effects of these interventions. To what extent are parenting intervention effects sustained in the years after the intervention? And do effects pertain to conduct problems specifically, or do they also affect broader aspects of children’s mental health? We used a randomized controlled trial to assess the longer-term (2.5 years) effects of the Incredible Years parenting intervention on children’s conduct problems in an indicated prevention setting (N = 387; 79% retention rate). Using a multi-method (survey and computerized tasks) and multi-informant (parents, teachers, and children) approach, we tested whether initial effects on conduct problems were sustained, and whether Incredible Years had broader effects on children’s peer problems, emotional problems, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms, attention and inhibition deficits, and service use. Incredible Years, relative to control (no intervention), led to sustained reductions in parent-reported conduct problems (Cohen’s d = 0.31), but not teacher- and child-reported conduct problems. There were no broader benefits: Incredible Years did not reduce children’s peer problems, emotional problems, ADHD-symptoms, attention and inhibition deficits, or their service use. Improvements in parents’ perceptions of child conduct problems sustained until 2.5 years later. Our findings do not show benefits of Incredible Years as a preventive intervention for children’s broader mental health.
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