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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Introduction: Behavioral inhibition during early childhood is one of the strongest
risk factors for the development of later anxiety disorders. Recently developed in-
person interventions that target both young children who are highly inhibited and
their parents (e.g., the Turtle Program), have decreased children’s anxiety and have
increased social participation in the peer group. However, researchers have yet
to examine the eects of intervention mode of delivery. In the present study, we
compared the pre-to post-intervention changes in child and parenting functioning
of families participating in the Turtle Program, delivered in-person and online with
those changes made in families allocated to a waiting-list condition; compared
session attendance, homework completion and satisfaction with the intervention
outcomes of families involved in the Turtle Program, delivered in-person and
online; and explored the predictive role of parenting and child factors in session
attendance, homework completion and satisfaction with the outcomes of families
involved in the Turtle Program, depending on the mode of delivery (in-person vs.
online).
Method: Fifty-seven parents of highly inhibited preschoolers (3–5 years), with no
diagnosis of selective mutism or developmental disorders, who were randomly
allocated to waiting-list (n = 20), Turtle Program delivered in-person (n = 17) and
online (n = 20) conditions completed the Portuguese versions of the Behavioral
Inhibition Questionnaire, the Preschool Anxiety Scale, the Social Behavior and
Competence Scale, the Modified Child-Rearing Practices Questionnaire at pre-
and post-intervention assessment. Parents also completed the Preschool Shyness
Study Satisfaction Survey at post-intervention assessment.
Results: Independent of intervention mode of delivery, generalized equation
estimates revealed a reduction in children’s total anxiety symptoms and
an improvement in parental nurturing behaviors. Child anxiety and social
competence at pre-assessment were the most prominent predictors of session
attendance and satisfaction with post-intervention child and parenting outcomes.
Discussion: Overall, this study showed that parents in both intervention conditions
perceived comparable positive changes in child functioning from pre- to post-
intervention assessment and similar levels of session attendance, homework
completion, and satisfaction. Significantly, however, perceived satisfaction with post-intervention child and parenting outcomes was higher, when children were
reported to display higher SEL skills at baseline, independent of the intervention
mode of delivery.
Description
Keywords
intervention program in-person internet-delivery early childhood behavioral inhibition parenting practices social and emotional learning (SEL) skills
Citation
Guedes, M., Maia, R., Matos, I., Antunes, M., Rolão, T., Veríssimo, M., Santos, A. J., Chronis-Tuscano, A., & Rubin, K. H. (2023). Preliminary perceived intervention changes and engagement in an evidence-based program targeted at behavioral inhibition during early childhood, delivered in-person and online. Frontiers in Psychology, 14. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1187255
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA