McCormick Erin, Kerns Suzanne E U, McPhillips Heather, Wright Jeffrey, Christakis Dimitri A, Rivara Frederick P
Seattle Children's Research Institute.
University of Washington.
Acad Pediatr. 2014 Jul-Aug;14(4):353-60. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2014.03.009.
We evaluated the effect of Primary Care Positive Parenting Program (Triple P) training on pediatric residents and the families they serve to test 2 hypotheses: first, training would significantly improve resident skill in identifying and addressing discrete parenting and child behavior problems; and second, parents would report an improvement in their sense of self-efficacy, use of positive discipline strategies, and their child's behavior.
Study participants included pediatric residents from 3 community clinics of a pediatric residency program, as well as English-speaking parents of children aged 18 months to 12 years without a diagnosed behavior disorder cared for by study residents. Residents were randomized to receive Primary Care Triple P training either at the beginning or end of the study period. The measured resident outcomes were self-assessed confidence and skills in giving parenting advice. The measured family outcomes were parent sense of self-efficacy, child externalizing behavior, and discipline strategies.
Primary Care Triple P training had a positive, significant, and persistent impact on residents' parenting consultation skills (mean increase on Parent Consultation Skills Checklist 48.11, 95% confidence interval [CI] 40.07, 57.36). Parents visiting intervention-trained residents demonstrated improved disciplinary practices compared to parents visiting control residents (mean change in Child Discipline Survey 0.322, 95% CI 0.02, 0.71), with stronger differential effects for parents with lower baseline skills (mean Child Discipline Survey change 0.822, 95% CI 0.48, 1.83). No differences were found for child behavior or parenting sense of confidence.
Training residents in Primary Care Triple P can have a positive impact on consultation skills and parent disciplinary practices. This finding adds strength to the call for increased residency training in behavioral pediatrics.
我们评估了初级保健积极育儿计划(Triple P)培训对儿科住院医师及其所服务家庭的影响,以检验两个假设:第一,培训将显著提高住院医师识别和解决离散育儿及儿童行为问题的技能;第二,家长会报告他们的自我效能感、积极管教策略的使用以及孩子行为的改善。
研究参与者包括来自一个儿科住院医师项目的3个社区诊所的儿科住院医师,以及由研究住院医师照料的18个月至12岁未被诊断出行为障碍的英语儿童家长。住院医师被随机分配在研究期开始或结束时接受初级保健Triple P培训。测量的住院医师结果是自我评估的提供育儿建议的信心和技能。测量的家庭结果是家长的自我效能感、孩子的外化行为和管教策略。
初级保健Triple P培训对住院医师的育儿咨询技能有积极、显著且持续的影响(育儿咨询技能清单平均增加48.11,95%置信区间[CI] 40.07,57.36)。与拜访对照住院医师的家长相比,拜访接受干预培训住院医师的家长表现出更好的管教行为(儿童管教调查平均变化0.322,95% CI 0.02,0.71),对于基线技能较低的家长,差异效应更强(儿童管教调查平均变化0.822,95% CI 0.48,1.83)。在儿童行为或育儿信心感方面未发现差异。
对住院医师进行初级保健Triple P培训可对咨询技能和家长管教行为产生积极影响。这一发现为呼吁增加行为儿科学住院医师培训提供了有力支持。