| Literature DB >> 35286544 |
Enrique Callejas1, Sonia Byrne2, María José Rodrigo2.
Abstract
While positive parenting programs are an initiative aligned with the Family-Centered Care model and the Council of Europe's Recommendation on Positive Parenting, implementation in healthcare centers remains a challenge. The aims of this study were to (1) investigate how the hybrid version (online course plus face-to-face activities) of the program "Gain Health & Wellbeing From 0 to 3" was implemented in Spain from professionals' perspective, and (2) explore the perceived impact of this hybrid version of the program on the implementers' professional development. We used a qualitative mixed-methods design that included focus groups and surveys. Fifty professionals from 17 centers completed the survey on professional development. Thirty-one of these also participated in the focus groups to address the first aim. The key themes identified from the focus group were professional training, parent recruitment, program features, organizational issues, parental responses, and program sustainability. Survey results related to positive professional impact fit nicely with subthemes concerning collaboration with parents, parental needs, center coordination, and future expectations. The perceived relevance of the parenting program and its positive impact on the implementers' professional development were potential predictors for the adoption and sustainability of the program in the public health system.Entities:
Keywords: Early childhood; Evidence-based parenting support; Parenting program; Pediatrics; Primary healthcare
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35286544 PMCID: PMC9021089 DOI: 10.1007/s10935-021-00664-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Prev (2022) ISSN: 2731-5533
Moderator’s guide
| Topics | Subtopics | Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction | Introduce the aim and the structure of the focus group session | The aim of this interview is to know your point of view about the program and its implementation. The focus group will last an hour approximately. We will discuss the process, from the beginning (training) to the end (sessions with families) and the changes that you have had throughout this experience |
| Implementation | Training | Which strategies have you learned thanks to the training? What contents would you add to the training sessions? |
| Recruitment and engagement | What do you think motivates families to attend the sessions? What are the barriers that hinder families’ attendance? | |
| Sessions | What do you value most in the sessions? Which activities have you felt more comfortable working with? How confident have you felt implementing the group sessions? | |
| Implementation requirements | Which conditions would be necessary to implement the program as a regular practice at your center (resources, facilities, etc.)? | |
| Improvement suggestions | If the sessions restarted, what would you do differently? What would you keep doing? | |
| Impact on the professional development | Learnings from this experience | Do you feel more able to identify the parents’ needs? Do you feel more able to promote healthy changes in the family routine? Has your relationship with the families changed? |
| Expectations | Are you willing to repeat sessions in the future or develop health promotion activities with parents? | |
| Close | Summary and acknowledgment | Would you want to add something else? Thank you very much |
Perceived impact on professional development across the levels of intervention (1 = Strongly disagree; 5 = Strongly agree)
| Variables | L1 | L2 | L3 |
| Post hoc | Partial Eta Squared |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual impact | 3.28 (0.67) | 3.74 (0.96) | 3.69 (0.76) | 1.28 | 1–2 1–3 2–3 | 0.05 |
| Teamwork impact | 3.33 (0.47) | 3.77 (0.25) | 3.66 (0.38) | 5.65* | 1–2** 1–3* 2–3 | 0.19 |
| Center organization impact | 3.30 (0.83) | 4.14 (0.76) | 4.15 (0.81) | 5.97** | 1–2* 1–3** 2–3 | 0.20 |
*p < .05; **p < .01
Frequency and quotations of subthemes related to survey scales
| Quantitative phase | Qualitative phase | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| Individual impact | Collaboration with parents |
| 17 |
| Positive parenting and child development |
| 10 | |
| Parental needs |
| 6 | |
| Teamwork impact | Professional coordination |
| 15 |
| Center organization impact | Coordination with other services |
| 10 |
| Program feasibility in primary care settings |
| 24 | |
| Future expectations about the program |
| 14 | |
Frequency of quotes in the categories structured by themes
| Themes | Emerged categories (subthemes) | Quotes a | |
|---|---|---|---|
| I. Initial information | Content of the initial information | 39 | 7.4% |
| Source of the initial information | 28 | ||
| II. Professional training | Training content | 26 | 10.6% |
| Training duration | 22 | ||
| Training delivery format | 16 | ||
| Other aspects of the training | 13 | ||
| III. Parent recruitment and adherence | Parent recruitment, adherence strategies used | 58 | 8.5% |
| Suggested recruitment, and adherence strategies | 38 | ||
| IV. Program features | Online version content | 9 | 10.8% |
| Online version design | 11 | ||
| Workshop session design | 46 | ||
| Adaptations made at workshop session | 16 | ||
| Program evaluation | 15 | ||
| V. Organizational issues | Coordination with other services† | 10 | 31.6% |
| Professional coordination† | 15 | ||
| Experience timing | 34 | ||
| Timing of the workshop sessions | 66 | ||
| Facilitating factors | 26 | ||
| Organizational barrier factors | 38 | ||
| Professional barrier factors | 10 | ||
| Parent barrier factors | 31 | ||
| Implementation requirements† | 55 | ||
| VI. Parent response | Parent expectations about the program | 20 | 11.9% |
| Parent attendance | 32 | ||
| Parent engagement | 18 | ||
| Parent satisfaction with the workshop sessions | 30 | ||
| Program effects on parents | 7 | ||
| VII. Program sustainability | Program feasibility for primary care settings† | 24 | 15.5% |
| Relevance of the program | 55 | ||
| Future expectations about the program† | 14 | ||
| Professional satisfaction with the program | 47 | ||
| VIII. Program impact on professional development | Collaboration with families† | 17 | 3.7% |
| Positive parenting and child development† | 10 | ||
| Parental needs† | 6 | ||
aTheme percentage out of a total of 902 quotations
†Marked subthemes are part of the subsequent merged analysis