Kenyon Lisa K, Krajenka Victoria M, Lach Katie, VanBeek Hayley, Williams Betsy, Bower Russa Mary
Department of Physical Therapy, Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, MI, USA.
University Libraries, Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, MI, USA.
Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol. 2023 Feb;18(2):185-194. doi: 10.1080/17483107.2020.1841310. Epub 2020 Nov 11.
Parental/caregiver adherence has been identified as a barrier to implementation of early power mobility programs. Motivational interviewing (MI) may help in addressing this barrier. Two scoping reviews were conducted to gather concepts pertaining to parent-based or rehabilitation-based MI interventions and to develop a parent-based MI intervention to address parental/caregiver adherence to home-based early power mobility interventions for infants and young children.
Separate literature searches for parent-based MI and rehabilitation-based MI were conducted in PubMed, CINAHL Complete, PsycInfo, and Web of Science Core Collection. Inclusion criteria were [1]: focussed on/use of either a parent-based or a rehabilitation-based MI intervention and [2] MI interventions described in sufficient detail to be reproduced. Articles focussed on vaccinations, child abuse and neglect, mental health, or technology-based MI were excluded. Data regarding MI interventions and strategies were extracted from included articles.
A total of 1130 unique titles were screened and 150 full-text articles were assessed for inclusion. Nineteen articles met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. Using a collaborative, consensus-based approach, a parent-based MI intervention incorporating specific MI strategies identified in the review was developed in collaboration with a psychologist. Future research exploring the application of this parent-based MI intervention is indicated.
The parent-based MI interventions developed in this project may help to increase parental adherence to home-based early power mobility programs, thereby potentially addressing an identified barrier to implementation of early power mobility programs.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATIONTo our knowledge, this is the first study to develop MI scripts for the purpose of increasing parental/caregiver adherence to a power mobility training program for children.The MI interventions developed in this study are consistent with published suggestions to address perceived barriers to the implementation of early power mobility programs.Given the strategies of collaboration, autonomy, and empowerment embedded within the spirit of MI, parent-based MI interventions are congruous with and inclusive of the principles of family-centered care.
家长/照顾者的依从性已被确定为早期动力移动计划实施的障碍。动机性访谈(MI)可能有助于解决这一障碍。进行了两项范围综述,以收集与基于家长或基于康复的MI干预相关的概念,并开发一种基于家长的MI干预措施,以解决家长/照顾者对婴幼儿家庭早期动力移动干预的依从性问题。
在PubMed、CINAHL Complete、PsycInfo和Web of Science核心合集中分别对基于家长的MI和基于康复的MI进行文献检索。纳入标准为:[1] 专注于/使用基于家长或基于康复的MI干预;[2] 对MI干预的描述足够详细以便重现。专注于疫苗接种、虐待和忽视儿童、心理健康或基于技术的MI的文章被排除。从纳入的文章中提取有关MI干预和策略的数据。
共筛选了1130个独特标题,评估了150篇全文文章是否纳入。19篇文章符合纳入/排除标准。采用协作、基于共识的方法,与一位心理学家合作开发了一种基于家长的MI干预措施,该措施纳入了综述中确定的特定MI策略。表明需要未来研究探索这种基于家长的MI干预措施的应用。
本项目中开发的基于家长的MI干预措施可能有助于提高家长对家庭早期动力移动计划的依从性,从而有可能解决早期动力移动计划实施中已确定的障碍。
据我们所知,这是第一项为提高家长/照顾者对儿童动力移动训练计划的依从性而开发MI脚本的研究。本研究中开发的MI干预措施与已发表的解决早期动力移动计划实施中感知障碍的建议一致。鉴于MI精神中蕴含的协作、自主和赋权策略,基于家长的MI干预措施与以家庭为中心的护理原则相一致且包含这些原则。