Article 

DATE: 7/28/2001 
CONTACT: Incredible Years (888) 506-3562 
CATEGORY: Prevention Study 
REFERENCE: Scott, S., Spender, Q., Doolan, M., Jacobs, Aspland, H. 2001. British Medical Journal. Vol. 323. 28 July. 

Multicentre controlled trial of parenting groups for childhood antisocial behaviour in clinical practice 

Parenting groups effectively reduce serious antisocial behaviour in children in real life conditions. 

To see whether a behaviourally based group parenting programme, delivered in regular clinical practice, is an effective treatment for antisocial behaviour in children.
Design Controlled trial with permuted block design with allocation by date of referral.
Setting Four local child and adolescent mental health services.
Participants 141 children aged 3.8 years referred with antisocial behaviour and allocated to parenting groups (90) or waiting list control (51).
Intervention Webster.Stratton basic videotape programme administered to parents of six to eight children over 13.16 weeks. This programme emphasises engagement with parental emotions, rehearsal of behavioural strategies, and parental understanding of its scientific rationale.
Main outcome measures Semistructured parent interview and questionnaires about antisocial behaviour in children administered 5.7 months after entering trial; direct observation of parent.child interaction.
Results Referred children were highly antisocial (above the 97th centile on interview measure). Children in the intervention group showed a large reduction in antisocial behaviour; those in the waiting list group did not change (effect size between groups 1.06 SD (95% confidence interval 0.71 to 1.41), P < 0.001). Parents in the intervention group increased the proportion of praise to ineffective commands they gave their children threefold, while control parents reduced it by a third (effect size between groups 0.76 (0.16 to 1.36), P = 0.018). If the 31 children lost to follow up were included in an intention to treat analysis the effect size on antisocial behaviour was reduced by 16%. 
Conclusions Parenting groups effectively reduce serious antisocial behaviour in children in real life conditions. Follow up is needed to see if the children's poor prognosis is improved and criminality prevented. 

Read the article (PDF)

 

__________________________________________________________
This search was generated on 9/10/2010.
<Back
<New Search
<Home

 

 

 

 



Incredible Years
1411 8th Avenue West    Seattle, WA 98119 USA   E-mail Us
Toll free call between 9 am and 3 pm PST (west coast time) - (888) 506-3562 or (206) 285-7565
FAX (888) 506-3562
  © 2009 The Incredible Years - Copyright Statement
Dinosaur Puppet © 2009 Axtell Expressions, Inc.

Please let us know if you discover a broken link, so we can check on it. However, please be advised that we are unable to offer technical assistance for opening the documents on our site. Most of our documents are in the PDF format and the Adobe Acrobat Reader plug-in is required. Some of the very large files, such as our program manuals are compressed. After downloading a compressed file, you must extract it. Windows XP and Vista have this built in, just right-click and choose 'extract' from the popup menu.  Mac users, open "Finder" and navigate to the file you wish to extract and double-click to extract it to the same folder.