| Literature DB >> 34051772 |
Amalee McCoy1,2, Jamie M Lachman3,4, Catherine L Ward5, Sombat Tapanya6, Tassawan Poomchaichote6, Jane Kelly7, Mavuto Mukaka6,8, Phaik Yeong Cheah6,8, Frances Gardner3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This feasibility pilot of the Parenting for Lifelong Health for Young Children program in Thailand aimed to: 1) explore the feasibility of study evaluation approaches; 2) assess the feasibility of delivering an adapted program; 3) report indicative effects on child maltreatment and related outcomes; and 4) examine intervention content associated with key mechanisms of change perceived by caregivers and facilitators.Entities:
Keywords: Abuse prevention; Child abuse; Child maltreatment; Parenting; Positive parenting; Thailand; Violence prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34051772 PMCID: PMC8164235 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-11081-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 4.135
Fig. 1Theory of change model for PLH-YC Thailand
Socio-demographic characteristics & child abuse risk factors among caregivers at pre-test
| Sociodemographic characteristics and risk factors | Participants ( |
|---|---|
| Age, M, range (SD) | 47.2, 18–68, (15.4) |
| Female, | 59 (98.3) |
| Unemployed, | 25 (41.7) |
| Secondary school not completed, | 51 (85.0) |
| Married, | 49 (81.7) |
| Relationship to target child | |
| Grandparent or great grandparent, | 39 (65.0) |
| Biological parent, | 20 (33.3) |
| Other relative, | 1 (1.7) |
| Mainly speaks Isan language at home, | 47 (78.3) |
| Can read easily, | 36 (60.0) |
| Poor health in the past month, | 11 (18.3) |
| Childhood experience of maltreatment, | 44 (73.3) |
| Experiencing intimate partner violence, | 24 (40.0) |
| Age, M, range (SD) | 4.9, 2–9, (2.0) |
| Female gender, | 28 (46.7) |
| Number of adults in the household, M, range (SD) | 3.4, 1–5 (1.1) |
| Number of children in the household, M, range (SD) | 1.9, 1–5, (0.8) |
| Neither biological parent living in the household, | 16 (26.7) |
| Caregiver ran out of money to buy food ≥5 days in past 30 days, | 7 (11.7) |
| Total monthly household income | |
| ≤ 5000 Baht (160 USD), | 8 (13.3) |
| 5001–15,000 Baht (160–481 USD), | 37 (61.7) |
| 15,001–30,000 Baht (481–962 USD), | 14 (23.3) |
| 30,001–50,000 Baht (962–1603 USD), | 1 (1.7) |
| House type | |
| Cement, brick or stone, | 47 (78.3) |
| Wood, | 8 (13.3) |
| Bamboo, plywood, or zinc (shack housing), | 5 (8.4) |
M mean
Fig. 2Study flow diagram
Outcomes at pre- and post-test for pooled imputed datasets
| Outcome | Pre-test | Post-test M ( | Test statistic* ( | Effect size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child maltreatment - physical & emotional abuse (ICAST-T), /200ac | 7.68 (7.02) | 3.63 (3.81) | 59 | ||
| Physical abuse subscale, /120c | 3.58 (3.92) | 1.31 (2.01) | 59 | ||
| Emotional abuse subscale, /80c | 4.10 (4.43) | 2.32 (2.90) | 59 | ||
| HOME Inventory: Abusive & harsh parenting, /6 | 1.13 (1.05) | 0.58 (1.01) | 60 | ||
| Overall positive parenting (PARYC), /126 | 69.00 (17.14) | 80.75 (16.27) | 60 | ||
| Supporting positive behavior subscale, /42 | 24.83 (5.60) | 28.73 (5.14) | 60 | ||
| Setting limits subscale, /42 | 21.90 (7.89) | 26.95 (6.13) | 60 | ||
| Proactive parenting subscale, /42 | 22.27 (6.93) | 25.07 (7.28) | 60 | ||
| Dysfunctional parenting (PS), /70 | 26.13 (9.06) | 19.90 (8.13) | 60 | ||
| Poor child monitoring & supervision (APQ), /55 | 15.87 (4.94) | 14.43 (4.14) | 60 | ||
| Neglect (ICAST-T), /48c | 1.33 (2.22) | 0.34 (2.30) | 59 | ||
| Overall depression, anxiety, and stress (DASS-21), /126 | 7.75 (7.26) | 4.27 (4.83) | 60 | ||
| Depression subscale, /42 | 4.70 (5.80) | 2.17 (3.54) | 60 | ||
| Anxiety subscale, /42 | 4.63 (4.95) | 2.43 (3.15) | 60 | ||
| Stress subscale, /42 | 6.17 (5.07) | 3.93 (4.33) | 60 | ||
| Attitudes supporting physical punishment (MICS), /23 | 1.98 (1.23) | 0.93 (1.02) | 60 | ||
| Attitudes toward harsh discipline (ICAST-T), /20 | 10.30 (2.01) | 8.47 (1.72) | 60 | ||
| Child behavior problems (ECBI) – Intensity subscale, /252 | 100.98 (28.66) | 78.28 (27.38) | 60 | ||
| Child behavior problems (ECBI) – Problems subscale, /36 c | 7.68 (9.34) | 1.77 (4.83) | 60 | ||
| Parent sense of inefficacy subscale (ICAST-T), /16 | 3.82 (3.42) | 1.92 (2.42) | 59 | ||
| HOME Inventory: Overall caregiver-child relationships, /27 | 21.17 (3.63) | 24.08 (2.66) | 60 | ||
| Parental responsivity subscale, /16c | 13.17 (2.61) | 14.25 (1.91) | 60 | ||
| Encouragement of child maturity subscale, /6c | 4.50 (1.42) | 5.58 (0.91) | 60 | ||
| Intimate partner violence subscale (CTS2S)/48 c | 1.08 (1.60) | 0.54 (1.05) | 48e | ||
| Intimate partner negotiation subscale (CTS2S)/16 | 2.81 (2.92) | 3.15 (4.17) | - 0.32 (0.975) | 48e | |
| Intimate partner coercion (WHO), /80 c | 3.50 (5.12) | 2.02 (3.50) | - 1.51 (0.132) | 48e | |
Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) between pre- and post-test are in bold
*Unless otherwise noted, standardized test statistics are from Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests
aValue indicates the maximum possible total score
bCohen’s d
cComplete imputations not possible due to lack of convergence
dTest statistic from paired samples t-test
eWilcoxon Signed Rank test calculated for 43 participants who were in a relationship at pre- and post-test
PDR assessment outcomes and comparisons at four time points for pooled imputed datasets
| Outcome | Pre-test | PDR#2 | PDR #3 | Post-test | Test statistic* ( | Comparison | Test statistic* ( | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parent daily report (PDR) on child problem behavior, /34ac | 6.87 (5.56) | 6.72 (5.24) | 4.73 (4.42) | 3.70 (3.86) | 60 | Pre-test, PDR#2 | - 0.02 (0.944) | 0.24 | ||
| PDR#2, PDR#3 | 0.24 | |||||||||
| PDR#3, Post-test | - 0.23 (0.322) | 0.24 | ||||||||
| Pre-test, Post-test | 0.24 | |||||||||
| Parent daily report (PDR) on positive parenting behavior, /9 | 7.17 (1.42) | 7.97 (1.09) | 8.27 (0.97) | 8.32 (1.00) | 60 | Pre-test, PDR#2 | 0.24 | |||
| PDR#2, PDR#3 | 0.37 (0.120) | 0.24 | ||||||||
| PDR#3, Post-test | 0.06 (0.805) | 0.24 | ||||||||
| Pre-test, Post-test | 0.24 |
Statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) between comparisons are in bold
*Test statistics are from Friedman’s ANOVA
aValue indicates the maximum possible total score
bCohen’s d
cComplete imputations not possible due to lack of convergence
Fig. 3Conceptual model of intervention content enabling perceived key mechanisms of change