Abstract
Despite significant stressors facing military families over the past 15 years of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, no parenting programs adapted or developed for military families with school-aged children have been rigorously tested. We present outcome data from the first randomized controlled trial of a behavioral parent training program for families with a parent deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan. In the present study, 336 primarily National Guard and Reserve families with 4–12-year-old children were recruited from a Midwestern state. At least one parent in each family had deployed to the recent conflicts: Operations Iraqi or Enduring Freedom, or New Dawn (OIF/OEF/OND). Families were randomized to a group-based parenting program (After Deployment, Adaptive Parenting Tools (ADAPT)) or web and print resources-as-usual. Using a social interaction learning framework, we hypothesized an indirect effects model: that the intervention would improve parenting, which, in turn, would be associated with improvements in child outcomes. Applying intent-to-treat analyses, we examined the program’s effect on observed parenting, and children’s adjustment at 12-months post baseline. Controlling for demographic (marital status, length, child gender), deployment variables (number of deployments), and baseline values, families randomized to the ADAPT intervention showed significantly improved observed parenting compared to those in the comparison group. Observed parenting, in turn, was associated with significant improvements in child adjustment. These findings present the first evidence for the effectiveness of a parenting program for deployed military families with school-aged children.
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02 November 2017
The authors would like to indicate the corrections to Table 2 of the above referenced article, below. The note is missing, and the CACE indirect coefficients should be .18** and .16** instead of .16** and .15**. The corrected table is shown below.
Notes
We hypothesize indirect effects of change in parenting to improvements in child adjustment, rather than mediating effects because mediation is more robustly tested with the mediator as a temporal antecedent to a distal outcome. We also expected and tested replication of PMTO findings from Forgatch and DeGarmo (1999) who found that parenting, as target of the intervention, showed preliminary sensitivity to change with indirect associations to child outcomes at 12-month post baseline, demonstrating full mediation at later follow-ups.
It was for that reason—as well as consideration of participant burden—that we opted not to gather observational parenting data at posttest (T2). That is why the current report focuses on change from T1 to T3.
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Funding was provided by the National Institute of Health, R01 DA 030114; 2010–2016.
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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.
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Gewirtz, A.H., DeGarmo, D.S. & Zamir, O. After Deployment, Adaptive Parenting Tools: 1-Year Outcomes of an Evidence-Based Parenting Program for Military Families Following Deployment. Prev Sci 19, 589–599 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11121-017-0839-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11121-017-0839-4