| Literature DB >> 26612963 |
Alison L Miller1, Lauren E Weston2, Jamie Perryman2, Talia Horwitz2, Susan Franzen2, Shirley Cochran3.
Abstract
Most incarcerated women are mothers. Parenting programs may benefit women, children and families, yet effectively intervening in correctional settings is a challenge. An evidence-based parenting intervention (the Strengthening Families Program) was tailored and implemented with women in a jail setting. Goals were to assess mothers' needs and interests regarding parenting while they were incarcerated, adapt the program to address those needs, and establish intervention delivery and evaluation methods in collaboration with a community-based agency. Women reported wanting to know more about effective communication; how children manage stress; finances; drug and alcohol use; self-care; and stress reduction. They reported high program satisfaction and reported reduced endorsement of corporal punishment after the intervention. Barriers to implementation included unpredictable attendance from session to session due to changing release dates, transfer to other facilities, and jail policies (e.g., lock-down; commissary hours). Implications for sustainable implementation of parenting programs in jail settings are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: incarcerated mothers; intervention tailoring; jail setting; parenting intervention; service delivery
Year: 2014 PMID: 26612963 PMCID: PMC4657561 DOI: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2014.06.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Youth Serv Rev ISSN: 0190-7409