Greve Lea Tangelev, Fentz Hanne Nørr, Trillingsgaard Tea
Developmental Psychology, Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Aarhus University, Bartholins Allé 11, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark.
Prev Sci. 2025 Aug 13. doi: 10.1007/s11121-025-01830-x.
This study explores long-term maintenance of family income levels in families receiving parent training for disruptive child behaviors. We use data from the Danish implementation of the Incredible Years Parent training (IYPT) across 21 municipalities from 2012 to 2019. Utilizing a quasi-experimental design with matching of a subsample of 707 out of the 1229 families from the Danish IYPT sample with 690 control families drawn from the national registers, we compare annual disposable family income in intervention families with the background population and control families from 2 years before to 4 years after pretest. Our findings reveal that intervention families and control families had significantly lower annual disposable family income than the background population families across all time points. For intervention families, the financial gap from the background population families widened from USD 11,268 to USD 16,694 from the first to the last time point. Adjusted regressions comparing intervention families to control families found a small but significant financial gap, so that intervention families had USD 2189 less to their disposal per year from the first time point and USD 7596 less per year at the last time point. These results suggest that intervention families faced increasing financial strain from years before up to 4 years following the IYPT, both in relation to the general Danish population and to the matched control of socioeconomically similar families across an 8-year span. We suggest that this could reflect continued stress and disruption of work schedule due to child behavior problems. Regardless of the underlying mechanism, these findings underscore the importance of considering the long-term economic contexts of families with disruptive child behaviors. Societal strategies that address both parenting challenges and broader contextual inequalities may be needed to support healthy child development.
本研究探讨了因孩子破坏性行为而接受家长培训的家庭中家庭收入水平的长期维持情况。我们使用了2012年至2019年丹麦21个市镇实施的“不可思议的岁月家长培训”(IYPT)的数据。利用准实验设计,将丹麦IYPT样本中1229个家庭的707个家庭子样本与从国家登记册中抽取的690个对照家庭进行匹配,我们比较了干预家庭与背景人群以及对照家庭在预测试前2年到后4年的家庭年度可支配收入。我们的研究结果显示,在所有时间点上,干预家庭和对照家庭的家庭年度可支配收入均显著低于背景人群家庭。对于干预家庭,从第一个时间点到最后一个时间点,与背景人群家庭的财务差距从11268美元扩大到了16694美元。将干预家庭与对照家庭进行比较的调整回归发现了一个虽小但显著的财务差距,即干预家庭从第一个时间点起每年可支配收入减少2189美元,到最后一个时间点每年减少7596美元。这些结果表明,在长达8年的时间里,干预家庭在IYPT之前的几年到之后的4年都面临着不断增加的财务压力,这与丹麦普通人群以及社会经济状况相似的匹配对照家庭相比都是如此。我们认为,这可能反映了由于孩子行为问题导致的持续压力和工作安排的中断。无论潜在机制如何,这些发现都强调了考虑有破坏性行为孩子的家庭的长期经济背景的重要性。可能需要社会策略来应对育儿挑战和更广泛的背景不平等,以支持儿童的健康发展。