A Community Mental Health Implementation of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT).

J Child Fam Stud

University of Washington, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, 6200 NE 74 St., Suite 100, Seattle, Washington 98115.

Published: October 2010

Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) has been identified as an evidence-based practice in the treatment of externalizing behavior among preschool-aged youth. Although considerable research has established its efficacy, little is known about the effectiveness of PCIT when delivered in a community mental health setting with underserved youth. The current pilot study investigated an implementation of PCIT with primarily low-socioeconomic status, urban, ethnic minority youth and families. The families of 14 clinically referred children aged 2-7 years and demonstrating externalizing behavior completed PCIT initial assessment, and 12 began treatment. Using standard PCIT completion criteria, 4 families completed treatment; and these families demonstrated clinically significant change on observational and self-report measures of parent behavior, parenting stress, and child functioning. Although treatment dropouts demonstrated more attenuated changes, observational data and parent-reported problems across sessions indicated some improvements with lower doses of intervention. Attendance and adherence data, referral source, barriers to treatment participation, and treatment satisfaction across completers and dropouts are discussed to highlight differences between the current sample and prior PCIT research. The findings suggest that PCIT can be delivered successfully in an underserved community sample when families remain in treatment, but that premature dropout limits treatment effectiveness. The findings suggest potential directions for research to improve uptake of PCIT in a community service setting.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2945385PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10826-010-9353-zDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

pcit
9
community mental
8
mental health
8
parent-child interaction
8
interaction therapy
8
therapy pcit
8
treatment
8
externalizing behavior
8
pcit delivered
8
families
5

Similar Publications

Treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in young children (ages 0-6) should be adapted to their developmental characteristics: to their cognitive, social, and emotional abilities, to their specific trauma reactions and adjustments, and finally, to their degree of dependency on adults. Due to the lack of official recommendations for the treatment of PTSD in young children and considering the high prevalence of PTSD among this population, there is a growing need for targeted psychological interventions and psychotherapies for the youngest children with PTSD or posttraumatic symptoms. To provide an update on effective psychological interventions available for the treatment of PTSD and posttraumatic symptoms in young children (under the age of 6).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Parent-Child Interaction Therapy-Toddler (PCIT-T) is an attachment-informed intervention model designed to meet the specific developmental needs of toddlers aged 12-24 months presenting with challenging behaviors.

Methods: This study used a randomized controlled design to evaluate outcomes of PCIT-T for children aged 14-24 months with disruptive behaviors. Ninety toddlers with parent-reported disruptive behavior were randomly allocated to PCIT-T (intervention), an active control condition (Circle of Security- Parenting™; COS-P), or a non-treatment control condition (wait-list; WL).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) is a highly efficacious, evidence-based treatment for children with disruptive behaviors and their families. PCIT is a dyadic therapy designed to improve parent-child relationships and decrease children's behavioral problems. PCIT research specific to Black families is currently sparse.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This case study examined the use of Internet Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (I-PCIT) to alleviate maternal guilt in a situation involving child abuse, particularly when traditional therapy was unsuitable due to geographic and professional constraints.
  • Multiple assessment tools were used to evaluate the therapy's effectiveness on both the child's behavior and the mother's depressive symptoms, revealing the mother's struggles with emotional regulation that contributed to her abusive behavior.
  • Over 19 sessions of I-PCIT conducted online, the mother demonstrated improved parenting skills and a strengthened relationship with her child, suggesting that I-PCIT could effectively reduce the risk of future abuse and enhance therapy engagement through collaboration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cultivated cotton plants are the world's largest source of natural fibre, where yield and quality are key traits for this renewable and biodegradable commodity. The cotton genome contains ~80K protein-coding genes, making precision breeding of complex traits a challenge. This study tested approaches to improving the genomic prediction (GP) accuracy of valuable cotton fibre traits to help accelerate precision breeding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!