Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

An Examination of Parental Skill Acquisition Resulting From a State-Wide Dissemination of SafeCare®

McFry, Erin A
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract

Family level data was collected from those served in a state-wide rollout of SafeCare® in Georgia between January of 2010 and November of 2011. Families who received SafeCare were trained in the intervention’s three modules: Parent-Child or Parent-Infant Interaction, Home Safety, and Child Health. The purpose of this study was to measure changes in parental skill demonstration by analyzing pre- and post-training assessments. Additionally, parental demographic characteristics were also assessed for associations with skill acquisition within each module. Follow-up analysis concluded that families displayed increases in parenting skills among all SafeCare modules. Moderator analysis showed that those with only one child showed greater decreases in home hazards as did those with two children. Also, it was found that income level moderated performance in the Parent-Child Interaction module with participants below the median income level exhibiting a greater increase in PCI skill demonstration than those above the median income level. Further research should consider modeling multiple parental characters (e.g. CPS status and income) with skill performance over time. Lastly, additional research should aim to determine if those who exhibit increases in parenting skills are also less likely to experience future child maltreatment reports.

Comments
Description
Date
2013-08-13
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
demographic characteristics, parental characteristics, parental skill acquisition, implementation research, parent-training programs, evidence-based programs, SafeCare model
Citation
McFry, Erin A. "An Examination of Parental Skill Acquisition Resulting From a State-Wide Dissemination of SafeCare®." Thesis, Georgia State University, 2013. https://doi.org/10.57709/4383118
Embargo Lift Date
2013-08-02
Embedded videos