| Literature DB >> 31156500 |
Sophie S Havighurst1,2, Christiane E Kehoe1, Ann E Harley1, Ameika M Johnson1, Nicholas B Allen3, Rae L Thomas4.
Abstract
Background: Parenting a toddler is a challenging experience for many parents with times of emotional dysregulation in both parent and child. Parenting interventions may be useful for parents to improve their ability to regulate emotions and respond to children's emotions in a way that assists the child to understand and regulate emotions (emotion competence). Tuning in to Toddlers (TOTS) is a new parenting program that aims to improve parents' emotion regulation, emotional responsiveness, and emotion coaching (aspects of emotion socialization) to promote optimal emotional development in toddlers, and prevent social and behavioral difficulties. This paper outlines the rationale, methodology, intervention, and recruitment used in a trial to establish program efficacy. Methods/Design: Parents of toddlers aged 18-36 months old were recruited through child care centers (CC) and maternal child health (MCH) centers in Melbourne, Australia and were allocated to either intervention or a 15-month wait-list control condition in a cluster-randomized controlled design. Inclusion criteria were a child in the age range at baseline attending one of the CC or MCH centers. Exclusion criteria were if the parent/carer had insufficient English to attend the intervention and complete measures. Parents in the intervention condition participated in the 6-session group TOTS program delivered by two facilitators using a structured manual and measures of program fidelity and acceptability. Participants in the wait-list control condition received the intervention after a 15-month waiting period. Participants completed measures at baseline, post-intervention (intervention participants only) and 15-month follow-up. Primary outcome measures included parent emotion socialization (parent-report and observed). Secondary outcomes included parent-reported parent functioning (emotion regulation and mental health), toddler social, emotional and behavioral functioning, and parent and toddler systemic cortisol stress (using hair samples). The study was designed to comply with the CONSORT statement and intervention reporting outlined using TIDieR.Entities:
Keywords: emotion coaching; emotion socialization; parenting; prevention; protocol; toddlers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31156500 PMCID: PMC6532415 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01054
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Figure 1Recruitment process.
TOTS program content.
| Session | Content |
|---|---|
| 1) Setting out – how to raise emotionally intelligent children | Overview of program, Engaging participants and creating safe group space, Normalizing toddler behavior, Psychoeducation: emotional intelligence and emotion coaching, Role play contrasting emotion dismissing and emotion coaching using scripts, Home activities: notice low intensity emotions, naming emotions |
| 2) Tuning in to your toddler’s emotions | Parent emotion awareness, Reflection on week and use of role plays, Meta-emotion: understanding influence of family of origin, Toddler development section, First 4-steps skills, Home activities: identify meta-emotion, first four steps, low intensity emotions |
| 3) Understanding your toddler’s emotional experience | Guided relaxation, Reflection on week and use of role plays, Meta-emotion: identification of automatic reactions, Parenting styles, Developing empathy, Scaffolding being an emotion coach, Home activities: first four steps, building empathy |
| 4) Self-care and exploring your toddler’s fears and worries | Guided relaxation, Parent self-care, Reflection on week and use of role plays, Meta-emotion: exploring family of origin experiences with fear, Fifth step of emotion coaching, Identifying attachment needs of toddler: connection and exploration, Coaching toddler’s to manage fears and worries, Home activities: connection/exploration to toddler, coaching fears/worries |
| 5) Emotion coaching your toddler’s anger | Progressive muscle relaxation, Reflection on week and use of role plays, Meta-emotion: understanding your own anger and family of origin experiences with anger, Understanding causes of toddler’s anger, Responding to toddler’s anger, Home activities: building in a pause, emotion coaching anger |
| 6) Emotionally intelligent parenting: now and in the future | Warm-up: relaxation or emotion awareness, Reflection on week and use of role plays, Emotional self-care and managing parent’s own anger, Review of five steps of emotion coaching, Role play with anger Sibling rivalry, Closing issues |