| Literature DB >> 29673391 |
Luwishennadige Madhawee N Fernando1, Wan Hua Sim1, Anthony F Jorm2, Ron Rapee3, Katherine A Lawrence1, Marie B H Yap4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preventive efforts targeting childhood anxiety and depression symptoms have the potential to alter the developmental trajectory of depression and anxiety disorders across the lifespan. Substantial previous research suggests that modifiable parenting factors such as parental aversiveness and over-involvement are associated with childhood anxiety, depressive and internalising symptoms, indicating that parents can play a critical role in prevention. The Parenting Resilient Kids study is a new evidence-based online parenting program designed to prevent anxiety and depression problems in primary school-aged children by reducing family-based risk factors and enhancing protective factors through increased positive interactions between parent and child. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Childhood; Internalising; Internet; Mental health; Prevention; Universal
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29673391 PMCID: PMC5909219 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2605-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
The Guidelines and the corresponding subsections of the parenting scale and module components
| Guidelines subheading | Corresponding subsection of the parenting scale and feedback report | Title of interactive module | Outline of content | Rationale for inclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| You can reduce your child’s risk of developing depression and clinical anxiety | NA. Not included in parenting scale or feedback report. | Not included in the modules | Psychoeducation about the role of parents in the prevention of depression and anxiety in primary school-aged children. | Endorsed by experts. |
| Establish and maintain a good relationship with your child | Relationship with your child | Topic 1: Show affection and acceptance | Helps parents show their children physical affection and acceptance through words and actions. | Sound evidence that parental warmth is associated with less internalizing symptoms. Emerging evidence that parental warmth is associated with fewer depression symptoms. |
| Topic 4: Make time to talk | Helps parents develop a supportive relationship with their child by learning effective ways to talk and listen to their child. | |||
| Be involved and support increasing autonomy | Involvement in your child’s life | Topic 2: Be involved | Helps parents stay involved and interested in their child’s life. | Emerging evidence that parent’s knowledge regarding their child′s activities, whereabouts and friends (parental monitoring) is associated with less anxiety and depressive symptoms. |
| Topic 3: Encourage autonomy | Helps parents encourage increasing age-appropriate autonomy in their child’s life. | Sound research evidence that over-involvement and autonomy granting are risk and protective factors, respectively, for depression; endorsed by experts. | ||
| Encourage supportive relationships | Child’s relationships with others | Topic 9: Topic Encourage supportive relationships | Provides strategies for parents to support their child’s social skills development. | Emerging evidence that parental encouragement of sociability is associated with less child anxiety; endorsed by experts. |
| Establish family rules and consequences | Rules and consequences for your child | Topic 6: Establish family rules and consequences | Highlights the importance of consistent and clear boundaries for child’s behaviours, and provides specific strategies to establish these. | Emerging evidence of the association between inconsistent discipline and internalizing symptoms; endorsed by experts. |
| Encourage good health habits | Health habits | Topic 5: Encourage healthy habits | Provides strategies to help parents encourage good health habits in their child, including a healthy diet, physical activity, good sleep habits, and appropriate screen time. | Endorsed by experts |
| Minimise conflict in the home | Home environment | Topic 10: Manage conflict in the home | Addresses the need for adaptive conflict management between parents, and between parent and child, and provides specific strategies to do these. | Evidence that inter-parental conflict and aversiveness (including parent-child conflict) are risk factors for depression (sound evidence) and anxiety (emerging evidence); endorsed by experts. |
| Help your child to manage emotions | Managing emotions | Topic 8: Help your child manage emotions | Helps parents understand and talk about their child’s emotions as well as provides parents strategies to help children manage strong emotions. | Emerging evidence that parents modelling anxiety is associated with anxiety symptoms in children. Endorsed by experts. |
| Help your child to set goals and solve problems | Setting goals and dealing with problems | Topic 7: Help set goals and solve problems | Provides strategies for parents to help their children develop good problem-solving skills. | Endorsed by experts. |
| Support your child when something is bothering them | Dealing with negative emotions | Topic 11: Help your child manage anxiety | Provides strategies for parents to help their children manage their everyday anxiety. | Emerging evidence that parents modelling anxiety is associated with anxiety symptoms in children. Endorsed by experts. |
| Help your child to manage anxiety so that it does not become a problem | Dealing with negative emotions | Topic 11: Help your child manage anxiety | Provides strategies for parents to help their children manage their everyday anxiety. | Emerging evidence that parents modelling anxiety is associated with anxiety symptoms in children. Endorsed by experts. |
| Encourage professional help seeking when needed | Getting help when needed | Topic 12: Seek help | Helps parents understand what depression and anxiety problems can look like in primary school- aged children and what they can do if their child is/becomes unwell. | Endorsed by experts; evidence that parents are important conduits to children seeking professional help for mental health problems. |
| Do not blame yourself (not included in the Guidelines and parenting scale, but included in feedback report for all parents) | NA. No module on this topic. | Aims to dispel guilt/self-blame in parents. | Endorsed by experts. |
Fig. 1Trial protocol. Children’s Report of Parent Behaviour Inventory (CRPBI), Psychological Control Scale (PCS), RCADS (Revised Children’s Anxiety and Depression Scale), Child Health Utility (CHU-9D), Assessment of Quality of Life (AQoL-8D), General Functioning subscale of the McMaster Family Assessment Device (GF)
Fig. 2SPIRIT figure
Factsheet topics and order of presentation
| Order of presentation | Topic | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|
| Factsheet 1 | Child development in the pre-teen years: an overview | Helps parents understand their child’s physical, emotional and social changes in the pre-teen years. |
| Factsheet 2 | Behavioural changes in the pre-teen years | Helps parents understand common behavioural concerns in the pre-teen years and learn ways to encourage good behaviour |
| Factsheet 3 | Connecting and communicating | Helps parents understand the importance of staying connected with their child and provide ideas on ways to improve communication with their child |
| Factsheet 4 | Internet safety | Provides parents with ideas on how to help their child use the Internet safely and responsibly |
| Factsheet 5 | Health and wellbeing in the pre-teen years | Helps parents understand the importance for their child to have healthy lifestyle habits |
| Factsheet 6 | Nutrition during the pre-teen years | Provides parents with ideas on making healthy food choices for their child |
| Factsheet 7 | School and education in the pre-teen years | Helps parent understand how they can support their child’s learning and education |
| Factsheet 8 | Building a strong positive relationship with the school | Provides parent with ideas on how to be involved in their child’s school and to build a positive relationship with the school |