Schwarz-Torres John C, Davis Isabella S, Thornburg Makayla A, Patel Herry, Aks Isabel R, Tapert Susan F, Brown Sandra A, Pelham William E
Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093.
Department of Psychology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093.
Evid Based Pract Child Adolesc Ment Health. 2025;10(1):162-174. doi: 10.1080/23794925.2024.2306626. Epub 2024 Jan 31.
Parental monitoring of teens' activities is a well-established protective factor targeted in many interventions to reduce problem behavior. However, no paper has compiled the extant recommendations on how clinicians should seek to improve parental monitoring-what psychoeducation to give parents, what behaviors to request of parents, and how to support parents in changing monitoring behaviors. Drawing from the Society for Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology's (SCCAP) lists of empirically supported treatments for adolescent problem behaviors, we reviewed the contents of 16 manualized interventions and extracted every mention of parental monitoring, then synthesized and organized the content. Our review yielded 23 recommendations for parents and 16 recommendations for clinicians, which we offer as a preliminary list of evidence-based recommendations on how to improve parental monitoring. Most of the 16 reviewed manuals contained a fraction of the total recommendations (mean = 8.1 out of 39) and only a few included concrete, detailed, in-depth instructions about how to monitor or implement changes in monitoring. Thus, it may be possible to improve the efficacy of existing manualized interventions by borrowing monitoring content and strategies from other manuals. Finally, we identified four major gaps in our existing recommendations that should be addressed in future empirical research. The reviewed manuals offered little advice about (1) how to prioritize among many monitoring recommendations, (2) when (if ever) to decrease monitoring, (3) how to minimize the chances of adverse teen reactions to monitoring, and (4) how to monitor teens using technology (e.g., digital location tracking, social media).
父母对青少年活动的监督是许多旨在减少问题行为的干预措施中确定的一个保护因素。然而,尚无论文汇编关于临床医生应如何设法改善父母监督的现有建议——应向父母提供何种心理教育、要求父母采取何种行为以及如何支持父母改变监督行为。借鉴临床儿童和青少年心理学协会(SCCAP)针对青少年问题行为的实证支持治疗清单,我们审查了16种手册化干预措施的内容,提取了所有提及父母监督的内容,然后对内容进行了综合和整理。我们的审查得出了23条给父母的建议和16条给临床医生的建议,我们将其作为关于如何改善父母监督的循证建议的初步清单提供。所审查的16本手册中的大多数只包含了总建议中的一部分(平均39条中的8.1条),只有少数手册包含了关于如何监督或实施监督变化的具体、详细、深入的说明。因此,通过借鉴其他手册中的监督内容和策略,有可能提高现有手册化干预措施的效果。最后,我们确定了现有建议中的四个主要空白,未来的实证研究应加以解决。所审查的手册几乎没有提供关于(1)如何在众多监督建议中确定优先顺序,(2)何时(如果有的话)减少监督,(3)如何将青少年对监督产生不良反应的可能性降至最低,以及(4)如何利用技术(如数字位置跟踪、社交媒体)监督青少年的建议。