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Effectiveness of the Incredible Years parent training to modify disruptive and prosocial child behavior: a meta-analytic review.

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TLDR
Findings indicate that the IYPT is successful in improving child behavior in a diverse range of families, and that the parent program may be considered well-established.
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This article is published in Clinical Psychology Review.The article was published on 2013-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 330 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Parent training & Prosocial behavior.

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Citations
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A national evaluation of parenting programs in Sweden : the short-term effects using a RCT effectiveness design

TL;DR: A national evaluation of parenting programs in Sweden is presented in this paper, where the short-term effects using a RCT effectiveness design is evaluated. But the evaluation is limited to Sweden.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct and indirect effects of the family check-up on self-regulation from toddlerhood to early school-age.

TL;DR: Results indicated that parental reports of inhibitory control showed positive, nonlinear increase with the growth decelerating over time, and the intervention had indirect effects on teacher reports of children’s self- control and oppositional defiant behavior as well as examiner ratings of self-control through its promotion of growth in inhibitoryControl.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Incredible Years Series: A Review of the Independent Research Base

TL;DR: The Incredible Years (IY) parent, teacher, and child training series, developed by Carolyn Webster-Stratton, has been studied extensively over the past several decades by the developer, her associates, and by other researchers as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The prevention of violence in childhood through parenting programmes: a global review.

TL;DR: The evidence from previous systematic reviews on the role of parenting programmes in the prevention of violence against children in both HICs and LMICs is examined to suggest that parenting programmes have the potential to both prevent and reduce the risk of child maltreatment.
References
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Book

Practical Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis procedure called “Meta-Analysis Interpretation for Meta-Analysis Selecting, Computing and Coding the Effect Size Statistic and its applications to Data Management Analysis Issues and Strategies.
BookDOI

Reducing risks for mental disorders: Frontiers for preventive intervention research.

TL;DR: This study provides a targeted definition of prevention and a conceptual framework that emphasizes risk reduction and presents a focused research agenda, with recommendations on how to develop effective intervention programs, create a cadre of prevention researchers, and improve coordination among federal agencies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirically Supported Psychological Interventions: Controversies and Evidence

TL;DR: The work of several task forces and other groups reviewing empirically supported treatments (ESTs) in the United States, United Kingdom, and elsewhere is summarized here, along with the lists of treatments that have been identified as ESTs.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Meta-analytic Review of Components Associated with Parent Training Program Effectiveness

TL;DR: This component analysis used meta-analytic techniques to synthesize the results of 77 published evaluations of parent training programs to enhance behavior and adjustment in children aged 0–7 and found components consistently associated with larger effects included increasing positive parent–child interactions and emotional communication skills.
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Frequently Asked Questions (18)
Q1. What contributions have the authors mentioned in the paper "Effectiveness of the incredible years parent training to modify disruptive and prosocial child behavior: a meta-analytic review" ?

The IYPT has seen widespread growth and is used and studied internationally as a treatment for children with severe conduct problems, as well as preventive intervention this paper. 

Although this meta-analytic review addresses an important part of this chain, other parts were not examined and left open for further research. Nonetheless, the overall effectiveness of the IYPT regarding parenting behaviors and characteristics that influence its effectiveness regarding these parenting behaviors remain interesting questions for further research. However, individual mediation studies regarding the IYPT suggest that parenting domains such as critical, harsh parenting, inconsistent discipline, verbal criticism, positive parenting, responsive parenting, and stimulating parenting ( Beauchaine et al., 2005 ; Brotman et al., 2009 ; Fossum et al., 2009 ; Gardner et al., 2006, 2010 ; Letarte, Normandeau, & Allard, 2010 ; Posthumus et al., 2012 ), mediate outcomes. Furthermore, ample evidence for modifications in parenting behaviors can be found in individual IYPT studies. 

Pre-treatment intensity of children's problem behavior proved to be the strongest predictor of the IYPT's intervention effects on parental report, with larger effects for studies which included more severe cases. 

The main family characteristics that may be associated with intervention outcomes are single parenthood, ethnic minority status, mother's level of education, and at-risk populations. 

for example, classroom-based components are likely to be added in prevention studies, which will include children with relatively few behavior problems. 

study contextwas strongly negatively related to the family characteristics ethnic minority and at-risk (which were also highly interdependent). 

Calculation of the failsafe number revealed that 1351 additional studies with nonsignificant or adverse results have to exist in order to reduce the overall effect size for disruptive behavior to a statistically non-significant overall effect, with a conventional significance level of .05. 

Because of the small set of studies that evaluated both additional IY components and additional other components, the addition of other components was ignored in further analyses, i.e. both categories were treated as IYPT + other IY components. 

Inflated effect sizes in developers' evaluation studies have been suggested (e.g., Eisner, 2009), because of developers' involvement and interests. 

Calculation of the fail-safe number revealed that 1207 additional studies with non-significant or adverse results have to exist in order to reduce the overall effect size for parents to a statistically non-significant overall effect. 

Calculation of the fail-safe number revealed that 300 additional studies with non-significant or adverse results have to exist in order to reduce the overall effect size for prosocial behavior to a statistically non-significant effect. 

Calculation of the fail-safe number revealed that 71 additional studies with non-significant or adverse results have to exist in order to reduce the overall effect size for teacher report to a statistically non-significant overall effect. 

Discrepancies between parents' and teacher's ratings are well-known, and may be caused by genuine contextual differences and more similarity in criteria as used by different teachers than in criteria as used by different parents (Scott, 2001), or insufficient generalization of the intervention effect from home to school settings. 

To control for these confounding variables in further moderator analyses, the authors first included initial severity of child behavior (whichwas also negatively related to minority and at-risk) in moderator analyses, and excluded problem and clinical symptom level. 

Behavioral parent training (BPT) has been proven to be themost effective intervention method for pre-school and school-aged youth with antisocial behavior problems (McCart, Priester, Davies, & Azen, 2006). 

Intervention characteristics, child characteristics, andmethodological features explained variability in parent-rated intervention outcomes of the IYPT. 

parents in treatment studies are probably more in need of help than parents in prevention studies, because they typically seek help themselves (Mrazek & Haggerty, 1994). 

the number of sessions attended by parents was positively related to intervention effects according to parents, even when initial severity of behavior was taken into account.