| Literature DB >> 31418422 |
Marie Bee Hui Yap1,2, Mairead C Cardamone-Breen1, Ronald M Rapee3, Katherine A Lawrence1, Andrew J Mackinnon4, Shireen Mahtani1, Anthony F Jorm2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prevention of depression and anxiety disorders early in life is a global health priority. Evidence on risk and protective factors for youth internalizing disorders indicates that the family represents a strategic setting to target preventive efforts. Despite this evidence base, there is a lack of accessible, cost-effective preventive programs for parents of adolescents. To address this gap, we recently developed the Partners in Parenting (PiP) program-an individually tailored Web-based parenting program targeting evidence-based parenting risk and protective factors for adolescent depression and anxiety disorders. We previously reported the postintervention outcomes of a single-blinded parallel-group superiority randomized controlled trial (RCT) in which PiP was found to significantly improve self-reported parenting compared with an active-control condition (educational factsheets).Entities:
Keywords: adolescent; anxiety; depression; family; internet; mental health; parenting; preventive health services; randomized controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31418422 PMCID: PMC6830751 DOI: 10.2196/13628
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Partners in Parenting modules, corresponding sections of the Parenting to Reduce Adolescent Depression and Anxiety Scale (PRADAS) and feedback report and Guidelines subheadings.
| Module title and content | Corresponding section of the PRADAS and feedback report | Guidelines subheadinga |
| Module: “Connect”—Acknowledges the challenge of connecting with adolescent children and provides specific tips on how to do this. | Your relationship with your teenager | Establish and maintain a good relationship with your teenager |
| Module: “Nurture roots and inspire wings”—Helps parents establish the important balance between staying involved and interested in their adolescent’s life, while encouraging increasing age-appropriate autonomy. | Your involvement in your teenager’s life | Be involved and support increasing autonomy |
| Module: “Good friends, supportive relationships”—Provides strategies for parents to support their adolescent’s social skills development. | Your teenager’s relationships with others | Encourage supportive relationships |
| Module: “Raising good kids into great adults: establishing family rules”—Highlights the importance of consistent and clear boundaries for adolescent behaviors and provides specific strategies to establish these. | Your family rules | Establish family rules and consequences |
| Module: “Calm versus Conflict”—Addresses the need for adaptive conflict management between parents and between parent and adolescent and provides specific strategies to do these. | Your home environment | Minimize conflict in the home |
| Module: “Good health habits for good mental health”—Provides strategies to help parents encourage good health habits in their adolescent, including a healthy diet, physical activity, good sleep habits, and abstinence from alcohol and drugs. | Health habits | Encourage good health habits |
| Module: “Partners in problem solving”—Provides strategies for parents to help their adolescent develop good problem-solving and stress management skills. | Dealing with problems in your teenager’s life | Help your teenager to deal with problems |
| Module: “From surviving to thriving: helping your teenager deal with anxiety”—Provides strategies for parents to help their adolescent manage their everyday anxiety. | Coping with anxiety | Help your teenager to deal with anxiety |
| Module: “When things aren’t okay: getting professional help”—Helps parents understand what depression and anxiety problems can look like in adolescents, and what they can do if their adolescent is or becomes unwell. | Getting help when needed | Encourage professional help seeking when needed |
aAdapted from [34]. Note that 2 of the 11 sections of the Guidelines (You can reduce your child’s risk of developing depression and clinical anxiety and Don’t blame yourself) do not have specific corresponding sections in the PRADAS or PiP modules, but the key messages they present are included in the feedback report and across all modules.
Figure 1Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) participant flow diagram. (a) These numbers differ from those published in the postintervention paper because of errors detected when preparing the 12-month follow-up data.
Mixed-model repeated measures planned contrast test of group × measurement-occasion interaction from baseline to 12-month follow-up for all primary and secondary outcome measures.
| Outcome measure | Estimated marginal means (SE) | t test | |||||
| Intervention | Control | ||||||
| Baseline | 46.58 (0.57) | 47.88 (0.57) | —d | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 51.68 (0.59) | 49.99 (0.61) | 4.81 (328.17) | <.001 | 0.51 (0.29 to 0.71) | 0.21 (−0.01 to 0.43) | |
| Baseline | 24.44 (0.44) | 24.89 (0.43) | — | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 23.38 (0.51) | 24.16 (0.50) | −0.59 (297.53) | .56 | −0.06 (−0.28 to 0.15) | −0.13 (−0.36 to 0.11) | |
| Baseline | 17.99 (0.90) | 18.51 (0.90) | — | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 13.72 (0.95) | 15.64 (0.94) | −1.28 (321.37) | .20 | −0.14 (−0.37 to 0.08) | −0.12 (−0.34 to 0.10) | |
| Baseline | 28.73 (1.36) | 30.20 (1.33) | — | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 27.20 (1.52) | 26.56 (1.49) | 1.36 (294.14) | .18 | 0.16 (−0.07 to 0.39) | 0.04 (−0.19 to 0.27) | |
| Baseline | 5.07 (0.40) | 4.75 (0.40) | — | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 3.48 (0.40) | 4.21 (0.40) | −1.88 (329.02) | .06e | −0.21 (−0.42 to 0.01) | −0.14 (−0.36 to 0.08) | |
| Baseline | 6.16 (0.47) | 6.40 (0.46) | — | — | — | — | |
| 12 months | 7.06 (0.58) | 7.08 (0.57) | 0.33 (296.86) | 0.74 | 0.04 (−0.19 to 0.27) | −0.01 (−0.24 to 0.22) | |
at statistic of the planned contrast test of group × measurement-occasion interaction from baseline to 12-month follow-up, estimated under the group × measurement-occasion mixed model.
bCohen d effect size of the group × measurement-occasion interaction from baseline to 12-month follow-up, calculated based on the t statistic of the planned contrast. Negative effect size indicates greater reduction in scores from baseline to 12-month follow-up in the intervention group compared with the control group.
cCohen d effect size of the difference between groups at 12-month follow-up. Negative effect size indicates lower scores in the intervention group compared with the control group.
dNot applicable.
eBecomes statistically significant with square-root-transformed data: t(324.98)=−2.04; P=.04; d=−0.21 (95% CI −0.42 to −0.01).
Figure 2Estimated marginal means for Parenting to Reduce Adolescent Depression and Anxiety Scale (PRADAS) and PRADAS—Adolescent (PRADAS-A) Report scores at baseline, postintervention (3-months postbaseline), and 12-month follow-up, estimated under the group × measurement-occasion mixed model. Error bars represent SEs. Higher scores on the PRADAS and PRADAS—Adolescent Report indicate greater concordance with the parenting guidelines (ie, more protective parenting factors and fewer parenting risk factors). Planned contrast of interaction (baseline to 12 months) was significant, P<.001. Pairwise comparison of group difference at 12-month follow-up was significant, P=.04.
Figure 3Estimated marginal means for the SCAS—Parent Report (SCAS-P), SCAS—Child Report (SCAS-C), SMFQ—Parent Report (SMFQ-P), and SMFQ—Child Report (SMFQ-C) estimated under the group × measurement-occasion mixed model. Error bars represent SE. *Planned contrast of baseline to 12-month group × measurement-occasion interaction effect significant at P<.05 level, when square-root-transformed data were used. SCAS: Spence Children’s Anxiety Scale; SMFQ: Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire.