| Literature DB >> 32742672 |
Kenneth E Miller1, Heba Ghalayini2, Maguy Arnous3, Fadila Tossyeh4, Alexandra Chen5, Myrthe van den Broek1, Gabriela V Koppenol-Gonzalez1, Joy Saade3, Mark J D Jordans1,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is robust evidence that compromised parenting, stemming from persistently high stress, mediates the impact of war and displacement on children's mental health and psychosocial wellbeing. Parenting interventions generally prioritize the acquisition of parenting knowledge and skills, while under-attending to parental stress and distress. This paper describes the development of the Caregiver Support Intervention (CSI), a nine-session group intervention for conflict-affected parents of children aged 3-13, that aims to strengthen parenting both indirectly, by lowering stress and improving psychosocial wellbeing among parents, and directly, by increasing knowledge and skill related to positive parenting.Entities:
Keywords: armed conflict; children; parenting; psychosocial; refugees
Year: 2020 PMID: 32742672 PMCID: PMC7379321 DOI: 10.1017/gmh.2020.8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Ment Health (Camb) ISSN: 2054-4251
Fig. 1.Conceptual model underlying the CSI. Dotted black lines indicate direct effects of war exposure and daily stressors on children's psychosocial wellbeing. Solid black lines indicate pathways from armed conflict to parenting, mediated by caregiver stress and wellbeing. Dotted blue line indicates the influence of cultural norms on parenting, as well as parents' experience with their own parents. Solid orange lines indicate the dual focus of CSI on targeting parenting indirectly via impact on caregiver stress and wellbeing, and directly through focus on positive parenting.
CSI sessions, modules, and stress management/relaxation methods
| Session | Topic | Module |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction and Group Building | Caregiver Wellbeing |
| 2 | Stress and Relaxation | Caregiver Wellbeing |
| 3 | Lowering our Stress | Caregiver Wellbeing |
| 4 | Coping with Frustration and Anger | Caregiver Wellbeing |
| 5 | Parental Stress and Influence | Parenting in Adversity |
| 6 | Increasing our Influence as Parents, Part I: Positive Attention | Parenting in Adversity |
| 7 | Increasing our Influence as Parents, Part 2: Effective Discipline | Parenting in Adversity |
| 8 | Positive Parenting: Practice | Parenting in Adversity |
| 9 | Looking Back, Looking Forward | Closure |
SM, stress management/relaxation technique taught during the session.
Fig. 2.Multiphase development of the CSI.