Publications by authors named "Rhonda Boyd"

Accumulating evidence supports the presence of a general psychopathology dimension, the p factor ('p'). Despite growing interest in the p factor, questions remain about how p is assessed. Although multi-informant assessment of psychopathology is commonplace in clinical research and practice with children and adolescents, almost no research has taken a multi-informant approach to studying youth p or has examined the degree of concordance between parent and youth reports.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The COVID-19 pandemic posed challenges to measuring mother-infant interactions, a critical outcome for many interventions to support mothers with postpartum depression symptoms and their new infants. The current study describes the process and lessons learned from implementing a remote assessment of mother-infant interactions during the pandemic.

Description: At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, we pivoted from in-person to using two different strategies to remotely assess mother-infant interactions: (1) participants independently recorded and uploaded videos of free-play with their child; and (2) research team conducted a live-video recording of the free-play.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Importance: Mood disorders are prevalent among adolescents and young adults, and their onset often coincides with driving eligibility. The understanding of how mood disorders are associated with youth driving outcomes is limited.

Objective: To examine the association between the presence of a mood disorder and rates of licensing, crashes, violations, and suspensions among adolescents and young adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • There has been slow progress in developing effective mental health interventions, prompting the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) to launch an experimental-therapeutics initiative to speed up research and application.
  • The approach focuses on identifying specific "target mechanisms"—processes that lead to improvements in clinical outcomes—and emphasizes collaboration among various stakeholders, including patients and providers.
  • The article discusses essential components of this approach, such as selecting clinical outcomes, defining and measuring target mechanisms, and tackling practical challenges for future research directions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Researchers and service providers typically assess pediatric Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) by collecting independent reports from parents and youth. An emerging body of work indicates that patterns of parent-youth reports yield information germane to understanding youth outcomes. We identified patterns of HRQOL among youth and their parents seeking mental health treatment and examined links between agreement patterns and mental and physical health functioning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A study tested a social media-based parenting program designed for mothers experiencing mild to moderate postpartum depression, comparing its effects to a standard depression treatment over three months.
  • Seventy-five women participated, with those in the parenting program showing a quicker decrease in depressive symptoms, but no significant differences in parenting-related measures such as stress or competence.
  • The results suggest that while social media can support mothers with depression, more focus on participant engagement and access to mental health treatment is necessary for improving overall parenting outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As commissioned by the Society for Prevention Research, this paper describes and illustrates strategic approaches for reducing health inequities and advancing health equity when adopting an equity-focused approach for applying prevention science evidence-based theory, methodologies, and practices. We introduce an ecosystemic framework as a guide for analyzing, designing, and planning innovative equity-focused evidence-based preventive interventions designed to attain intended health equity outcomes. To advance this process, we introduce a health equity statement for conducting integrative analyses of ecosystemic framework pathways, by describing the role of social determinants, mechanisms, and interventions as factors directly linked to specific health equity outcomes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience significantly higher levels of depression and lower family functioning compared to mothers of children with Down syndrome and typically developing children.
  • The study found that better family functioning is linked to reduced depression, higher self-efficacy, and fewer severe ASD symptoms.
  • Enhancing maternal child care self-efficacy could help mitigate depression in mothers of children with ASD, suggesting a need for targeted interventions to improve self-efficacy and family functioning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Society for Prevention Research (SPR) aims to continually provide relevant professional development training opportunities to advance scientific investigation of ways to improve the health, well-being, and social and educational outcomes of individuals and communities. Our study, led by the Training Needs Assessment Task Force, designed a quantitative questionnaire informed by semistructured, qualitative interviews of 13 key prevention science informants. The questionnaire was deployed to all SPR members, of which 347 completed it.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: This pilot study describes the adaptation of a parenting group intervention for social media, and examines the feasibility, acceptability and initial outcomes of the adapted intervention for mothers with postpartum depression symptoms. : Postpartum depression can negatively affect parenting and the parent-infant relationship. Mothers with postpartum depression symptoms experience barriers to access in-person parenting interventions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends postpartum depression (PPD) screening. It is unknown whether pediatricians are effective in linking mothers to mental health services. The objectives of the current study are to determine 1) mental health care use among women with Medicaid insurance after a positive PPD screen and 2) maternal and infant factors that predict the likelihood of mental health care use.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Caregiver depression impacts parenting behaviors and has deleterious effects on child behavior. Evidence-based interventions to address parenting have not been adapted for use with depressed caregivers in pediatric primary care settings. Our study examined the feasibility and explored outcomes of an evidence-based parenting program implemented in primary care and adapted for caregivers with depressive symptoms caring for toddlers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF