'Living with Teenagers': feasibility study of a peer-led parenting intervention for socially disadvantaged families with adolescent children.
OBJECTIVE: To develop and test the feasibility of a peer-led parenting intervention for parents of adolescent children. DESIGN: Formative evaluation using a mixed-method cohort design. SETTING: Socially deprived community sites in London, UK. PARTICIPANTS: Parents seeking help with managing behavioural difficulties of an index adolescent child (aged 11-17 years). INTERVENTION: A structured, group-based intervention ('Living with Teenagers') delivered by trained peer facilitators. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We assessed feasibility in terms of uptake and completion rates (% parents completing ≥5 sessions); social validity (assessed by service satisfaction measure and participant interviews); and potential for impact (assessed by parent-reported measures of adolescent behaviour and mental health, parenting satisfaction, expressed emotion, and disciplinary practices). RESULTS: Participants (n=41) were predominately (79%) from minority ethnic backgrounds and nearly half were lone parents. Most had not previously accessed a structured parenting programme. The completion rate was 71%. Significant changes (p<0.05) were observed in reduced parental concern about adolescent problems, increased parenting satisfaction and less negative expressed emotion. There were non-significant changes in disciplinary practices and adolescent mental health. Participants were highly satisfied with their service experience and endorsed the acceptability of the intervention's content, materials and peer-led format, while suggesting an expanded number of sessions and more skills practice and demonstrations. CONCLUSIONS: Peer-led parenting groups are feasible and potentially effective for supporting parents of adolescents living in socially disadvantaged communities. These findings warrant more rigorous testing under controlled conditions.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior, psychology, Child, Child Behavior Disorders, psychology, Cohort Studies, Feasibility Studies, Great Britain, Humans, Parent-Child Relations, Parenting, psychology, Parents, psychology, Peer Group, Psychosocial Deprivation |
ISI | 339242900008 |