Integrating Mindfulness With Parent Training: Effects of the Mindfulness-Enhanced Strengthening Families Program

Authors
Coatsworth, J. D. Duncan, L. G. Nix, R. L. Greenberg, M. T. Gayles, J. G. Bamberger, K. T. Berrena, E. Demi, M. A.
Publication year
2015
Citation Title
Integrating mindfulness with parent training: Effects of the mindfulness-enhanced strengthening families program.
Journal Name
Developmental Psychology
Journal Volume
51
Issue Number
1
Page Numbers
26-35
DOI
10.1037/a0038212
Summary
Parent education programs include a variety of elements in their curriculum. Researchers used a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effects of parent education with and without mindfulness elements on positive parenting behavior. Findings indicated that parent education was effective and including mindfulness had different results for mothers and fathers.
Key Findings
Fathers’ relationships with youth and management of youth behavior were significantly more positive when they participated in parent education with mindfulness compared to parent education without mindfulness or home study; these increases continued at least a year after the program ended.
Mothers who participated in the parent education without mindfulness showed the most positive behaviors immediately after the program, while those who participated in the parent education with mindfulness showed worse outcomes than the control group immediately after participation.
At the one-year follow-up, the group of the mothers who participated in the parent education with mindfulness demonstrated positive parenting similar to that of the parent education without mindfulness group; both groups demonstrated more positive parenting than the control group.
Implications for Military Professionals
Help parents identify strengths and areas for growth within their relationships with their children
Assist parents who feel like they are doing worse after a program to develop possible long-term benefits and growth
Implications for Program Leaders
Consider incorporating elements of mindfulness into parent education, particularly for fathers
Provide parent education that aims to increase positive parenting behaviors for military parents
Implications for Policy Makers
Recommend training for professionals who work with military families regarding different approaches to working with parents and advantages and disadvantages of those approaches
Continue to support the development of parent education programs for military families
Methods
Participants were recruited from urban and rural schools in Pennsylvania over four consecutive school years.
Families were randomly assigned to a group which participated in parent education without mindfulness, parent education with an additional mindfulness element, or a control group who received information about youth development to study at home.
Parents and youth completed surveys regarding parent behaviors, parent-child relationship, and youth behavior control.
Data from the groups were compared immediately after the program and one year later to determine effects of the parent education and parent education with mindfulness.
Participants
Participants were 432 families with children in the sixth and seventh grade.
Families identified as White (69%), Black (15%), Latino (8%), Asian-American (4%), Native American (1%), or Multiracial (3%).
Of the families, 66% included two parents.
Limitations
All families were from one geographic location, so results may not be generalizable to other areas of the United States.
The youth were all in sixth and seventh grade so it is unclear whether these result extend to parents of younger or older children.
Many of the mothers who participated in the parent education with the mindfulness element noted that their analysis of their parenting behavior would be more negative after program participation because they were newly aware of missed opportunities; this may have influenced findings.
Avenues for Future Research
Evaluate the effectiveness of parent education with and without mindfulness elements in a more geographically-representative sample and in families with youth in a wider age range
Use observations to collect data immediately after program participation to avoid the possible influence of mothers’ realization of missed opportunities on results
Investigate the efficacy of parent education with and without mindfulness elements in military families
Design Rating
3 Stars - There are few flaws in the study design or research sample. The flaws that are present are minor and have no effect on the ability to draw conclusions from the data.
Methods Rating
3 Stars - The definitions and measurement of variables is done thoroughly and without any bias and conclusions are drawn directly from the analyses performed.
Limitations Rating
2 Stars - There are a few factors that limit the ability to extend the results to an entire population, but the results can be extended to most of the population.
Focus
Civilian
Population Focus
Abstract
There is growing support for the efficacy of mindfulness training with parents as an intervention technique to improve parenting skills and reduce risk for youth problem behaviors. The evidence, however, has been limited to small scale studies, many with methodological shortcomings. This study sought to integrate mindfulness training with parents into the Strengthening Families Program: For Parents and Youth 10_14 (SFP 10_14), an empirically-validated family-based preventive intervention. It used a randomized-controlled comparative effectiveness study design (N = 432 families, 31% racial/ethnic minority) to test the efficacy of the Mindfulness-Enhanced Strengthening Families Program (MSFP), compared to standard SFP 10_14 and a minimal-treatment home study control condition. Results indicated that, in general, MSFP was as effective as SFP 10_14 in improving multiple dimensions of parenting, including interpersonal mindfulness in parenting, parent_youth relationship quality, youth behavior management, and parent well-being, according to both parent and youth reports at both postintervention and 1-year follow-up. This study also found that in some areas MSFP boosted and better sustained the effects of SFP 10_14, especially for fathers. Although the pattern of effects was not as uniform as hypothesized, this study provides intriguing evidence for the unique contribution of mindfulness activities to standard parent training.
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