| Literature DB >> 23253201 |
Michele L Allen1, Diego Garcia-Huidobro, G Ali Hurtado, Rose Allen, Cynthia S Davey, Jean L Forster, Monica Hurtado, Katia Lopez-Petrovich, Mary Marczak, Ursula Reynoso, Laura Trebs, María Veronica Svetaz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite declines over recent years, youth tobacco and other substance use rates remain high. Latino youth are at equal or increased risk for lifetime tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, and other illicit drug use compared with their white peers. Family plays an important and influential role in the lives of youth, and longitudinal research suggests that improving parenting skills may reduce youth substance use. However, few interventions are oriented towards immigrant Latino families, and none have been developed and evaluated using a community-based participatory research (CBPR) process that may increase the effectiveness and sustainability of such projects. Therefore, using CBPR principles, we developed a randomized clinical trial to assess the efficacy of a family-skills training intervention to prevent tobacco and other substance use intentions in Latino youth. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23253201 PMCID: PMC3543344 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-13-242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Padres Informados/Jóvenes Preparados conceptual model. *Intervention components in gray.
Figure 2Padres Informados/Jóvenes Preparados study design.
Eligibility criteria for participants
| Parent | |
| | Either mother or father born in a Latin American country |
| | Speaks Spanish |
| | Willing to give consent for self and youth |
| Youth | |
| | Between ages 10 and 14 |
| | Speaks English or Spanish |
| | Identifies himself/herself as Latino/Latina |
| | Willing to give assent |
| | Mental disorder incompatible with the participation on the trial |
| Prior participation in Padres Informados/Jóvenes Preparados pilot or planning | |
Instruments used to measure parenting practices and parent–youth relationships
| Parenting practices | |
| Parental Monitoring Knowledge | 0.78 to 0.82
[ |
| Parental Acceptance | 0.67 to 0.79
[ |
| Consistent Discipline | 0.69 to 0.77
[ |
| Parenting Practices Self-efficacy | 0.86 to 0.94
[ |
| Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support | 0.93 to 0.86
[ |
| Parent–youth relationships | |
| Parent | 0.81 to 0.85
[ |
| Adolescent Parent–Child Conflict/Conflict Processes | 0.87 to 0.92
[ |
Description of the intervention sessions
| 1 Parenting Styles | Parents | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Recognize their own parenting style. | · Review a video on parenting styles and discuss. | ||
| · Distinguish the key elements of the positive parenting style. | · Self-assess their parenting styles and discuss in small groups. | ||
| 2 Between Multiple Worlds | Parents | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Recognize that their strong family orientation as Latino parents protects against youth risk behavior. | · Identify their own cultural values as parents and compare/contrast with those of school and youth. | ||
| · Understand that their youth must navigate between family, school, and peer cultures. | · Self-assess their own and their youth’s cultural orientation and reflect on differences. | ||
| · Learn skills to help their youth navigate across cultures. | | ||
| 3 Adolescent Development | Parents | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Review normal adolescent development and the need to adapt parenting strategies to developmental stages. | · Compare the behaviors of their youth with previous years. | ||
| · Contextualize challenging behavior within tasks of adolescent development. | · Reflect on why adolescents challenge parents and how not to ‘take it personally’. | ||
| 4 Communication | Parents and youth | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Understand how strong communication fits with the values of respect for authority and | · Practice active listening. | ||
| | · Discuss barriers and facilitators to conversations with youth. | ||
| · Learn basic principles of good communication and develop communication skills. | · Practice communication using ‘I’ messages. | ||
| Youth will: | Youth will: | ||
| · Recognize the importance of communication with parents. | · Play the broken phone and identify barriers in communication. | ||
| · Learn specific communication skills. | · Practice when and how to talk and listen. | ||
| | · Practice ‘I’ messages. | ||
| 5 Discipline | Parents | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Learn the importance of positive behavioral reinforcement. | · Identify strategies to encourage positive behavior in their youth. | ||
| · Understand the importance of establishing negotiable and non-negotiable rules, and establishing and reinforcing consequences. | · Practice developing negotiable and non-negotiable rules for their family. | ||
| 6 Conflict resolution | Parents and youth | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Understand that conflict is part of the normal developmental process, and does not need to damage their relationships. | · Identify positive and negative aspects of conflicts. | ||
| · Identify collaborative problem-solving and conflict resolution strategies. | · Discuss and role-play a strategy to solve problems with their youth. | ||
| · Learn to recognize and self-regulate emotions. | · Develop strategies to manage anger. | ||
| Youth will: | Youth will: | ||
| · Learn collaborative problem-solving strategies. | · Talk about rules, consequences and mistakes. | ||
| · Identify strategies to recognize and manage emotions. | · Talk about emotions and their consequences. | ||
| | · Name the steps to effectively solve problems. | ||
| 7 Supervision and Friends’ Influence | Parents and youth | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Understand the meaning and importance of monitoring. | · Discuss scenarios to differentiate supervision from over-control. | ||
| · Learn strategies to monitor their youth effectively at each developmental stage of adolescence. | · Role-play initiating conversations with parents of their children’s friends. | ||
| Youth will: | Youth will: | ||
| · Identify dreams that they want to achieve. | · Develop a collage to help visualize dreams and goals. | ||
| · Identify influences and behavior (including substance use) that may get in the way of achieving dreams. | · Practice strategies to refuse risky behaviors. | ||
| · Learn strategies to avoid problem behaviors. | | ||
| 8 Connection | Parents and youth | Parents will: | Parents will: |
| · Understand that parent–youth connection is the foundation for parenting, and recognize barriers to relationship-building. | · Engage in activity around setting kids as priority for time. | ||
| · Identify strategies to strengthen their relationship with their youth. | · Write a letter to their children expressing their love and expectations. | ||
| Youth will: | Youth will: | ||
| · Reflect on the importance of a strong parent–youth relation. | · Complete a map of personal connections. | ||
| · Identify parents and other adults as a support network. | · Write a message to their parents expressing their thankfulness. |