A Motivational Intervention Can Improve Retention in PCIT for Low-Motivation Child Welfare Clients

Author:

Chaffin Mark1,Valle Linda Anne2,Funderburk Beverly3,Gurwitch Robin3,Silovsky Jane3,Bard David3,McCoy Carol3,Kees Michelle4

Affiliation:

1. University of Oklahoma,

2. U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

3. University of Oklahoma

4. University of Michigan

Abstract

A motivational orientation intervention designed to improve parenting program retention was field tested versus standard orientation across two parenting programs, Parent—Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) and a standard didactic parent training group. Both interventions were implemented within a frontline child welfare parenting center by center staff. Participants had an average of six prior child welfare referrals, primarily for neglect. A double-randomized design was used to test main and interaction effects. The motivational intervention improved retention only when combined with PCIT (cumulative survival = 85% vs. around 61% for the three other design cells). Benefits were robust across demographic characteristics and participation barriers but were concentrated among participants whose initial level of motivation was low to moderate. There were negative effects for participants with relatively high initial motivation. The findings suggest that using a motivational intervention combined with PCIT can improve retention when used selectively with relatively low to moderately motivated child welfare clients.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference34 articles.

1. Abidin, R.R. ( 1997). Parenting Stress Index: A measure of the parent-child system. In C. P. Zalaquett & R. J. Wood (Eds.), Evaluating stress: A book of resources (pp. 277-291). Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Education.

2. Parent-Training Programs in Child Welfare Services: Planning for a More Evidence-Based Approach to Serving Biological Parents

3. Brinkmeyer, M.Y. & Eyberg, S.M. ( 2003). Parent-Child Interaction Therapy. In A. Kazdin & J. Weisz (Eds.), Evidence-based psycho-therapies for children and adolescents (pp. 204-223). New York: Guilford .

4. Parent-Child Interaction Therapy With Physically Abusive Parents: Efficacy for Reducing Future Abuse Reports.

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