A systematic review of parenting interventions for child chronic health conditions.
Amy E MitchellAlina MorawskaMandy MihelicPublished in: Journal of child health care : for professionals working with children in the hospital and community (2019)
This systematic review summarizes the parenting intervention literature for parents of children with chronic health conditions and evaluates intervention effects on parenting (parenting skills and parenting efficacy) and child (behaviour, illness severity/control and quality of life) outcomes. Systematic searches using seven electronic databases (including CINHAL, MEDLINE and PsycINFO) were used to identify relevant papers published in English between 1997 and 2017, and reference lists were searched for additional relevant articles. Ten papers reporting on eight separate studies met inclusion criteria: three studies evaluated stand-alone parenting interventions, while the remaining five studies included parenting components in broader interventions that also targeted medically oriented aspects of illness management. Results suggest that parenting interventions may lead to improved parent self-efficacy, parenting behaviour, illness severity/control, child quality of life and child behaviour; however, intervention effects were mixed and confined to parent-report outcome measures. A paucity of studies using rigorous randomized controlled trial study designs limits the conclusions that can be drawn regarding intervention efficacy. Achieving adequate enrolment and retention of families in parenting intervention trials appears to be problematic within these clinical groups. Larger samples and more diverse clinical populations will support the reliability of future evaluations of parenting interventions in this context and improve generalizability of results.
Keyphrases
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- mental health
- physical activity
- healthcare
- public health
- meta analyses
- young adults
- clinical trial
- case control
- machine learning
- health insurance
- climate change
- tyrosine kinase
- weight loss
- insulin resistance
- current status
- drug induced
- electronic health record
- human health