New York University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, New York, NY; Northwestern University, Department of Communications Sciences and Disorders, Evanston, IL.
New York University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, New York, NY; SUNY Purchase College, Department of Psychology, Purchase, NY.
J Pediatr. 2019 Oct;213:187-195.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2019.06.037. Epub 2019 Aug 6.
To investigate pathways by which interventions that promote shared reading and play help prevent child behavior problems. We examined whether family processes associated with the family investment pathway (eg, parental cognitive stimulation) and the family stress pathway (eg, mothers' psychosocial functioning) mediated impacts of a pediatric-based preventive intervention on child behavior.
The sample included 362 low-income mothers and their children who participated in a randomized controlled trial of the Video Interaction Project, a pediatrics-based preventive intervention that promotes parent-child interactions in the context of shared reading and play. Parent-child dyads were randomly assigned to group at birth. Three mediators-parental cognitive stimulation, maternal stress about the parent-child relationship, and maternal depressive symptoms-were assessed at child ages 6 and 36 months. The outcome, child externalizing behaviors, was assessed at 36 months. We used a series of path analytic models to examine how these family processes, separately or together, mediated the impacts of the Video Interaction Project on child behavioral outcomes.
Intervention impacts on child behavior were mediated by enhancements in cognitive stimulation and by improvements in mothers' psychosocial functioning. A sequential mediation model showed that Video Interaction Project impacts on cognitive stimulation at 6 months were associated with later decreases in mothers' stress about the parent-child relationship and that this pathway mediated intervention impacts on child behavioral outcomes at 3 years of age (P = .023).
Using an experimental design, this study identifies pathways by which parent-child interactions in shared reading and play can improve child behavioral outcomes.
Clinicaltrials.gov: NCT00212576.
探讨促进亲子共读和游戏的干预措施预防儿童行为问题的途径。我们研究了与家庭投资途径(如父母认知刺激)和家庭压力途径(如母亲的心理社会功能)相关的家庭过程是否中介了基于儿科的预防干预对儿童行为的影响。
该样本包括 362 名参与基于儿科的预防干预措施——视频互动项目的低收入母亲及其子女,该项目在亲子共读和游戏的背景下促进亲子互动。母婴二人组在出生时被随机分配到组中。在儿童 6 个月和 36 个月时评估了 3 个中介变量——父母认知刺激、母亲对亲子关系的压力和母亲的抑郁症状。在 36 个月时评估了儿童的外化行为。我们使用一系列路径分析模型来检验这些家庭过程是如何单独或共同中介视频互动项目对儿童行为结果的影响的。
干预对儿童行为的影响通过认知刺激的增强和母亲心理社会功能的改善来介导。一个顺序中介模型显示,6 个月时视频互动项目对认知刺激的影响与母亲对亲子关系的压力的后期降低有关,而这一途径中介了干预对儿童 3 岁时行为结果的影响(P=0.023)。
使用实验设计,本研究确定了亲子共读和游戏中的亲子互动如何改善儿童行为结果的途径。
Clinicaltrials.gov:NCT00212576。