| Literature DB >> 31244732 |
Virginia Burgdorf1, Marianna Szabó1, Maree J Abbott1.
Abstract
Background: The psychological well-being of parents and children is compromised in families characterized by greater parenting stress. As parental mindfulness is associated with lower parenting stress, a growing number of studies have investigated whether mindfulness interventions can improve outcomes for families. This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluates the effectiveness of mindfulness interventions for parents, in reducing parenting stress and improving youth psychological outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: child externalizing; child internalizing; meta-analysis; mindful parenting; mindfulness; parenting intervention; parenting stress; systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31244732 PMCID: PMC6562566 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Details of included studies.
| Bazzano et al. ( | NR | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (59%), ID (21%), cerebral palsy (5%), Down syndrome (3%), other diagnoses (11%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MBSR adapted for parents of children with disabilities | Parent/caregiver group | 8 weeks × 2 h + 4 h silent retreat; total 20 h | |
| Bögels et al. ( | Clinical: DD (21%), PTSD (21%), ADHD (14%), PDD (14%), Asperger's (7%) | Clinical: ODD (43%), PDD (21%), ADHD (14%), CD (14%) ASD (7%) | WLC trial: | MBCT adapted for parents | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 8 weeks × 1.5 h; total 12 h (for both parent and adolescent groups) | ||
| Bögels et al. ( | Clinical: Parent-child relational problem (58%), DD (16%), adjustment disorder (8%), BD (2%), ADHD (1%), BPD (1%) | Clinical: ADHD (47%), ASD (21%), AD (7%), DD (5%), ODD (4%), LD (4%), CD (1%), schizophrenia (1%) | WLC trial: | MP (Bögels and Restifo, | Parent group | 8 weeks × 3 h; total 24 h | ||
| Chan and Neece ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (64%), other developmental delay (36%) | RCT: | MBSR: MBSR program | MBSR: Parent group Control: Nil | MBSR: 8 weeks × 2 h + 6 h retreat; total 22 h | ||
| Chaplin et al. ( | Non-clinical: self-reported parenting stress | Non-clinical: inclusion criteria did not require diagnosis or referral, but 53% of families receiving psychotherapy | RCT: | MP: Parenting Mindfully (based on MBSR and Duncan et al., | MP: Parent group Control: Parent group | MP: 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| Corthorn ( | Non-clinical | Non-clinical | Controlled trial: | MP: MBSR adapted for parents | MP: Parent group Control: Nil | MP: 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| De Bruin et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (52%), PDD (48%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Bögels and Restifo, | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 9 weeks × 1.5 h; total 13 h (for both parent and adolescent groups) | ||
| Eames et al. ( | Non-clinical: low socio-economic community | Non-clinical | Uncontrolled trial: | Mindfulness-based well-being for parents (adapted from MBSR) | Parent group | 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| Ferraioli and Harris ( | NR (all under 18) | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (66%), PDD (34%) | RCT: | MP: Mindfulness-based parent training (adapted from mindfulness module, Linehan, | MP: Parent group Control: Parent group | MP: 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | |
| Haydicky et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD | WLC trial: | MP (adapted from Bögels et al., | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 8 weeks × 1.5 h; total 12 h (for both parent and adolescent groups) | ||
| Jones et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (76%), ID (10%), cerebral palsy (10%), Down's syndrome (5%) | Uncontrolled trial: | Mindfulness-based wellbeing for parents (adapted from MBSR) | Parent group | 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| Lewallen and Neece ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (83%), other developmental delay (17%) | RCT: | MBSR: MBSR program | MBSR: Parent group Control: Nil | MBSR: 8 weeks × 2 h + 6 h retreat; total 22 h | ||
| Lo et al. ( | NR (pre-school age) | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (57%), developmental delay (28%), ADHD (7%), | RCT: | MP: MP adapted from Bögels ( | MP: Parent group Control: Nil | MP: 6 weeks × 1.5 h; total 9 h | |
| Lo et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD | RCT: | MP: MP adapted from Bögels and Restifo ( | MP: Parent group and separate child mindfulness group Control: Nil | MP: 6 weeks × 1.5 h; total 9 h (for parent groups). 8 weeks × 1 h (for child groups).Control: Nil | ||
| Maloney and Altmaier ( | Non-clinical: participants recently divorced or separated | Non-clinical | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Placone-Willey, | Parent group | 12 weeks; session length NR; total 15 h | ||
| Mann et al. ( | Mean NR (2–6)Gender NR | Non-clinical: history of depression (≥ 3 episodes and in full/ partial remission) | Non-clinical | RCT: | MP: MBCT adapted for parents with history of depression | MP: Parent group Control: Nil | MP: 8 weeks, session length and total hours NRControl: Nil | |
| Meppelink et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (29%), parent-child interaction problem (26%), ADHD (24%), AD (3%), ODD (1.5%), adjustment disorder (1.5%), other diagnosis (6%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Bögels and Restifo, | Parent group | 8 weeks × 3 h; total 24 h | ||
| Neece ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD | RCT: | MBSR: MBSRControl: Nil (offered MBSR after waitlist) | MBSR: Parent group Control: Nil | MBSR: 8 weeks × 2 h + 6 h retreat; total 22 h | ||
| Potharst et al. ( | Clinical: mental | Non-clinical: sleeping problems (27%), excessive crying (18%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MP adapted for mothers with a baby (Bögels et al., | Mother/baby | 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| Potharst et al. ( | Non-clinical, self-reported parenting stress | Non-clinical | WLC trial: | MP shortened for | Parent group | 8 weeks × 2 h; total 16 h | ||
| Potharst et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD (31%), ASD (23%), DICA (10%), AD (5%), PTSD (4%), MD (1%), OCD (1%), ODD (1%), IED (1%), unknown diagnosis (21%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Bögels and Restifo, | Parent group | 8 weeks × 3 h + 3 h booster session, 8 weeks post-completion; total 27 h | ||
| Racey et al. ( | Non-clinical: 50% parents had history | Clinical: partially recovered from depressive episode | Uncontrolled trial: | MBCT adapted for parents and youth | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 8 weeks (for both parent and adolescent groups); session length and total hours NR | ||
| Ridderinkhof et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (IQ ≥ 80) | Uncontrolled trial: | MP adapted for parents of children with ASD from Bögels and Restifo ( | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 9 weeks × 1.5 h (for both parent and adolescent groups) + 1x joint parent/ adolescent booster session, 9 weeks post-completion; total 15 h | ||
| Short et al. ( | NR (≤3)Gender NR | Clinical: in treatment for opioid and other substance-use disorders | Non-clinical | Uncontrolled trial: | MP adapted from MBSR | Parent group | 12 weeks × 2 h; total 24 h | |
| van de Weijer-Bergsma et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Bögels et al., | Parent group and separate adolescent mindfulness group | 8 weeks × 1.5 h (for both parent and child groups) + 1x joint parent/ adolescent booster session, 8 weeks post-completion; total ~13 h | ||
| van der Oord et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD | WLC trial: | MP adapted for parents of children with ADHD from Bögels et al. ( | Parent group and separate mindfulness group for children | 8 weeks × 1.5 h; total 12 h (for both parent and child groups) | ||
| Voos ( | M = 9.5 (range NR; < 18) | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (Bögels and Restifo, | Parent group | 8 weeks × 1.5 h; total 12 h | |
| Xu ( | M = 4.68 (2.5–5) 71% boys | Non-clinical | Clinical: ASD (48%), ID or other developmental delay (36%), Down's syndrome (16%) | Uncontrolled trial: | MBSR | Parent group | 8 weeks × 2 h + 6 h retreat; total 22 h | |
| Zhang et al. ( | Non-clinical | Clinical: ADHD | Uncontrolled trial: | MP (van der Oord et al., | Parent group and separate child mindfulness group | 8 weeks × 1.5 h; total 12 h (for both parent and child groups) | ||
For both parent and youth clinical status, “Clinical” means that the participating parent or their child were selected for the study based on either a clinical diagnosis, or referral for clinical assistance, for a mental health difficulty. “Non-clinical” means the participating parents, or their child, were not selected for the study based on either a clinical diagnosis or referral for clinical assistance. A non-clinical group of parents or youth may still, therefore, include individuals who meet criteria for a psychiatric or physical health condition; NR, Not reported; MBSR, Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (Kabat-Zinn et al., 1992); MBCT, Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (Segal et al., 2002); MP, mindful parenting; WLC, waitlist controlled; RCT, randomized, controlled trial; ASD, an autism spectrum disorder; ID, an intellectual disability; DD, a depressive disorder; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; ADHD, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; PDD, pervasive developmental disorder; ODD, oppositional defiant disorder; CD, conduct disorder; BD, bipolar disorder; BPD, borderline personality disorder; AD, anxiety disorder; LD, learning disorder; OCD, obsessive compulsive disorder; MD, mood disorder; IED, intermittent explosive disorder; DICA, disorder of infancy, childhood or adolescence not otherwise specified; VABS, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (Sparrow et al., 1984);
Chan and Neece (2018), Lewallen and Neece (2015), and Xu (2017) are included in this table for clarity, however these three studies appear to utilize samples of participants overlapping with Neece (2014);
Potharst et al. (2018) included two separate streams of participants. One stream attended the intervention in non-clinical settings, the other attended in clinical settings. Study characteristics are reported separately for each setting, given they were independent from each other;
basic non-clinical program was 8 weeks × 2 h. However, there were 4 locations (A, B, C, and D) and some varied the basic program. B ran 2.5 h sessions, D ran 3 h sessions, and B and D offered a follow-up session;
basic clinical program was 8 weeks × 3 h + 3 h booster. This was run at 4 locations (E, F, G, and H). Location E adjusted the session length to 2.5 h.
Reported results of mindfulness intervention, for parenting stress.
| Bazzano et al. ( | PSS | NRa (+) | NRa (+) | – | – |
| Bögels et al. ( | PSI, Competence scale | – | – | ||
| Chaplin et al. ( | SIPA subscales: | ||||
| Parent Life Restrictions | – | – | – | ||
| Parent Incompetence/Guilt | – | – | – | ||
| Relationship with Partner | – | – | – | ||
| Corthorn ( | PSI–SF | – | – | NR (+) | |
| De Bruin et al. ( | PSI | – | – | ||
| Eames et al. ( | PSI–SF | – | – | – | |
| Ferraioli and Harris ( | PSI–SF | ||||
| Haydicky et al. ( | SIPA | NR | – | – | |
| Jones et al. ( | QRS-PFP | – | – | – | |
| Lo et al. ( | PSI-SF | – | – | – | |
| Lo et al. ( | PSI-SF | – | – | – | |
| HRV Low frequencyc | – | – | – | ||
| Maloney and Altmaier ( | PSI-SF | – | – | – | |
| Mann et al. ( | PSI-SF | – | – | ||
| Neece ( | PSI-SF, Parental Distress scale | – | – | ||
| Potharst et al. ( | PSI, modified version | – | – | ||
| Potharst et al. ( | OBVL | – | – | ||
| Ridderinkhof et al. ( | PSI, Competence scale | – | – | ||
| Short et al. ( | PSI-SF | – | – | – | |
| van de Weijer-Bergsma et al. ( | PSI–SF | – | – | ||
| van der Oord et al. ( | PSI-SF | NR (ns) | – | – | |
| Voos ( | PSI | NR | – | – | |
| Zhang et al. ( | PSI-SF | – | – | – | |
= all parenting stress effects are based upon the reports of the parent/s who attended the intervention, and therefore combine mother and father reports, except in the case of van de Weijer-Bergsma et al. (.
Reported results of mindfulness intervention, for youth psychological outcomes.
| Bögels et al. ( | Mindfulness | MAAS | Youth | – | ||
| Internalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Internalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Happiness | SHS | Youth | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Self-control | SCRS | Youth | – | |||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Thought problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Attention problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | |||||
| Sustained attention | D2 Test of Attention | Youth | ||||
| Social outcomes: | ||||||
| Social problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Social behavior | CSBQ | Parent | – | |||
| Bögels et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Internalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | |||
| De Bruin et al. ( | Mindfulness | MAAS – A | Youth | − | ||
| Internalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Worry | PSWQ | Youth | – | |||
| Rumination | RRS | Youth | – | |||
| Well-being | WHO-5 | Youth | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Autism core symptoms | AQ | Youth | – | |||
| Parent | ||||||
| Social outcomes: | ||||||
| Social responsiveness | SRS | Parent | – | |||
| Haydicky et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Internalizing problems | RCADS | Youth | – | |||
| Parent | NR | |||||
| Anxiety | RCADS | Youth | – | |||
| Parent | NR | |||||
| Depression | RCADS | Youth | – | |||
| Parent | NR | |||||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| ODD | Conners | Youth | – | |||
| Parent | NR | |||||
| CD | Conners | Youth | NR | – | ||
| Parent | ||||||
| Hyperactivity/impulsivity | Conners | Youth | NR | – | ||
| Parent | NR | |||||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Inattention | Conners | Youth | NR | – | ||
| Parent | ||||||
| Learning problems | Conners | Youth | NR | – | ||
| Parent | ||||||
| Executive function | Conners | Parent | – | |||
| Social outcomes: | ||||||
| Peer relations | Conners | Parent | – | |||
| Family relations | Conners | Youth | – | |||
| Jones et al. ( | Externalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Behavior problems | SDQ | Parent | – | – | ||
| Social outcomes: | ||||||
| Prosocial behavior | SDQ | Parent | – | – | ||
| Lo et al. ( | Externalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Behavior problems | ECBI | Parent | – | – | NR (ns) | |
| Behavior severity | ECBI | Parent | – | – | NR (ns) | |
| Lo et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Internalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| ADHD symptoms | SWAN | Parent | – | – | ||
| Executive function | CANT Conflict monitoring | Youth | – | – | ||
| Mann et al. ( | Externalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Behavior problems | SDQ | Parent | – | – | ||
| Meppelink et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Internalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | |||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Attention problems | CBCL | Parent | – | |||
| Neece ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Internalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Emotional reactivity | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Anxious/depressed | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Somatic complaints | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Withdrawn/depressed | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Sleep problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| DSM Affective problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| DSM Anxiety problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Emotion dysregulation | DCS | Observer | β = 0.27, sr2 = 0.06 | – | – | |
| Emotion regulation | ERC | Parent | – | – | ||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Aggressive behavior | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| DSM ADHD problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| DSM ODD | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Attention problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| DSM Developmental problems | CBCL | Parent | – | – | ||
| Social outcomes | SSIS | |||||
| Self-control | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Communication | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Cooperation | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Assertion | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Responsibility | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Empathy | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Engagement | Parent | – | – | |||
| Secondary Informant | ||||||
| Teacher | ||||||
| Potharst et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Positive affect | IBQ-R | Parent | – | |||
| Regulating | IBQ-R | Parent | – | |||
| Negative emotionality | IBQ-R | Parent | – | |||
| Potharst et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Well-being | WHO-5 | Parent | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Behavior problems | SDQ | Parent | – | |||
| Racey et al. ( | Internalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Depression | BDI-II | Youth | NR (+) | – | – | |
| Rumination | RRS | Youth | NR (+) | – | – | |
| Self–compassion | SCS | Youth | NR (+) | – | – | |
| De-centring | EQD | Youth | NR (+) | – | – | |
| Ridderinkhof et al. ( | Mindfulness | CAMM | Youth | |||
| Internalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Internalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Rumination | RRS | Youth | – | |||
| Stress | CSQ-CA | Youth | – | |||
| Sleep problems | CSRQ | Youth | – | |||
| Well-being | WHO-5 | Youth | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | d = 0.21 (+) | d = 0.43 (+); d = 0.42 (+) (1 yr.) | – | ||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Attention problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Parent | – | ||||
| Social outcomes: | ||||||
| Social responsiveness | SRS | Parent | – | |||
| van der Oord et al. ( | Externalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Inattention | DBDRS | Parent | – | |||
| Teacher | NR (ns) | NR (ns) | ||||
| Hyperactivity | DBDRS | Parent | – | |||
| Teacher | NR (ns) | NR (ns) | ||||
| ODD | DBDRS | Parent | NR (ns) | NR (ns) | – | |
| Teacher | NR (ns) | NR (ns) | ||||
| van de Weijer-Bergsma et al. ( | Mindfulness | MAAS | Youth | – | ||
| Internalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Internalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Mother | – | ||||
| Father | ||||||
| Teacher | – | |||||
| Fatigue | FFS | Youth | – | |||
| Happiness | SHS | Youth | – | |||
| Externalizing outcomes: | ||||||
| Externalizing problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Mother | – | ||||
| Father | ||||||
| Teacher | – | |||||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Attention problems | YSR | Youth | – | |||
| CBCL | Mother | – | ||||
| Father | ||||||
| Teacher | – | |||||
| Metacognitive problems | BRIEF | Mother | – | |||
| Father | ||||||
| Teacher | – | |||||
| Behavior regulation problems | BRIEF | Mother | – | |||
| Father | ||||||
| Teacher | – | |||||
| Reaction time | ANT | Youth | ||||
| Sustained attention | ANT | Youth | ||||
| Impulsivity | ANT | Youth | ||||
| Zhang et al. ( | Externalizing outcomes: | |||||
| Behavior problems | ECBI | Parent | – | – | ||
| Behavior severity | ECBI | Parent | – | – | ||
| Cognitive outcomes: | ||||||
| Metacognitive problems | BRIEF | Parent | – | – | ||
| Behavior regulation problems | BRIEF | Parent | – | – | ||
| Sustained attention | Tea–CH | Youth | – | – | ||
| Selective/focussed attention | Tea-CH | Youth | – | – | ||
| Attentional control/switching | Tea-CH | Youth | – | – | ||
| Inattention | CCPT | Youth | – | – | ||
| Impulsivity | CCPT | Youth | – | – | ||
| Vigilance° | CCPT | Youth | – | – | ||
| Sustained attention | CCPT | Youth | – | – | ||
For within-group results, effect size is reported as a positive number if there was an improvement in the outcome, and as a negative number if there was a deterioration. For between-group results, effect size is reported as a positive number if the outcome improved more in the mindfulness group than the control group; + indicates effect size is significant, p < 0.05;
, 8 week follow up, unless otherwise indicated; NR, not reported by study authors; ns, not significant;
the follow-up effects reported by Haydicky et al. (2015) are post-follow up;
only the conflict monitoring effect is included, as effects for alerting, orienting, response time, and accuracy were reported only as non-significant;
Emotion dysregulation effect is reported in Chan and Neece (2018);
Emotion regulation is reported in Xu (2017);
Social skills are reported in Lewallen and Neece (2015);
d not reported, but mean change reported as significant;
these measures were only completed by adolescents ≥11years;
Sustained attention measured by “misses” measures of Amsterdam Neuropsychological Tasks (ANT; De Sonneville, 1999);
Impulsivity measured by “false alarms” measures of ANT;
Sustained attention measured by Score!, Sky Search DT, Walk Do Not Walk, and Code Transmission subtests of the Test of Everyday Attention for Children (Tea-CH; Manly et al., 2001);
Selective/focussed attention measured by Sky Search and Map Mission subtests of Tea-CH;
Attentional control/switching measured by Creature Counting and Opposite Worlds subtests of Tea-CH;
Inattention measured by detectability, omissions, commissions, Hit reaction time (HRT) statistics, and variability measures in Conners' Continuous Performance Test, 3rd edition (CCPT; Conners, 2015);
Impulsivity measured by commissions, perseverations, and HRT measures of CCPT; °Vigilance measured by HRT block change measure of CCPT;
Sustained attention measured by HRT block change measure of CCPT; MAAS, Mindful Attention and Awareness Scale (Brown and Ryan, .
Figure 1Flow diagram showing process of study selection.
Figure 2Pre- to post-intervention change in parenting stress.
Within-group effects for four youth outcome domains.
| Internalizing | Post-intervention | 12 | 438 | 0.29 | <0.001 | 0.21–0.36 | 22% | 0.229 |
| Follow-up | 9 | 397 | 0.33 | <0.001 | 0.22–0.44 | 46% | 0.065 | |
| Externalizing | Post-intervention | 14 | 621 | 0.26 | <0.001 | 0.18–0.34 | 37% | 0.079 |
| Follow-up | 10 | 414 | 0.39 | <0.001 | 0.31–0.47 | 7% | 0.379 | |
| Cognitive | Post-intervention | 7 | 231 | 0.27 | 0.001 | 0.11–0.42 | 52% | 0.051 |
| Follow-up | 5 | 144 | 0.40 | <0.001 | 0.24–0.55 | 24% | 0.263 | |
| Social | Post-intervention | 5 | 158 | 0.28 | <0.001 | 0.14–0.43 | 25% | 0.254 |
K, number of studies included in the effect size calculation; n, total number of participants in the studies included in the relevant domain;
, all follow up assessments are 2 months post-intervention, except for one study included in the Externalizing domain, which conducted follow-up 4 months post-intervention;
, follow-up data were not analyzed for the Social outcomes domain, as only three studies reported follow-up social outcome data.
Figure 3Pre- to post-intervention change in overall youth outcomes.
Figure 4Bubble plot of youth externalizing outcome effects against change in parenting stress. Each bubble represents a study, and the diameter of each bubble is proportional to the study weight.
Figure 5Bubble plot of youth internalizing outcome effects against change in parenting stress. Each bubble represents a study, and the diameter of each bubble is proportional to the study weight.
Figure 6Funnel plot of standard error by within-group parenting stress effect sizes. The white diamond represents the observed summary effect size, while the black diamond represents the imputed summary effect size free of publication bias.
Figure 7Funnel plot of standard error by within-group overall youth outcomes effect sizes. The black circle represents the effect size of the imputed study that would be required to remove publication bias. The white diamond represents the observed summary effect size, while the black diamond represents the imputed summary effect size free of publication bias.
Risk of bias assessment for reviewed studies.
| Bazzano et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Unclear | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Bögels et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Bögels et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Corthorn ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Chan and Neece ( | – | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Chaplin et al. ( | – | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| De Bruin et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Eames et al. ( | Serious | Low | Low | Unclear | Serious | Serious | Moderate |
| Ferraioli and Harris ( | - | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Haydicky et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Jones et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Lewallen and Neece ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Moderate | Moderate | Moderate |
| Lo et al. ( | – | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Lo et al. ( | – | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Moderate | Low |
| Maloney and Altmaier ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Serious | Critical |
| Mann et al. ( | – | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Serious | Low |
| Meppelink et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Neece ( | – | Low | Unclear | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Potharst et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Low | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Potharst et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Low | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Racey et al. ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Moderate | Critical | Critical | Moderate |
| Ridderinkhof et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Moderate | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Short et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Moderate | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| van de Weijer-Bergsma et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Low | Moderate | Moderate | Serious |
| van der Oord et al. ( | Serious | Low | Low | Low | Low | Serious | Moderate |
| Voos ( | Serious | Low | Moderate | Unclear | Moderate | Serious | Moderate |
| Xu ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Serious | Serious | Moderate |
| Zhang et al. ( | Serious | Low | Unclear | Moderate | Low | Serious | Moderate |
RCT. For all RCTs in this table, the terms used to describe the level of bias have been changed from “Low,” “High,” and “Unclear” (used in the RoB tool), to “Low,” “Moderate,” “Serious,” “Critical,” and “Unclear,” to reflect the terms and judgment guidelines used in ROBINS-I;
not relevant for RCTs;
For RCTs, the assessment of selection bias asks (1) whether there was random sequence generation and (2) whether there was allocation concealment. In this table, only one risk assessment is reported for RCTs under this bias domain, as the level of risk assessed for these two aspects of selection bias was equal for each of the reviewed RCTs.