Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect With Parent Training: Evidence and Opportunities
Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect With Parent Training: Evidence and Opportunities
Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect With Parent Training: Evidence and Opportunities
www.futureofchildren.org
Richard P. Barth is a professor and dean at the School of Social Work at the University of MarylandBaltimore.
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Substance Abuse
Substance abuse by a childs parent or guardian is commonly considered to be responsible
for a substantial proportion of child maltreatment reported to the child welfare services.1
Studies examining the prevalence of substance abuse among caregivers who have
maltreated their children have found rates
ranging from 19 percent2 to 79 percent or
higher.3 One widely quoted estimate of the
prevalence of substance abuse among caregivers involved in child welfare is 40 to 80
percent.4 An epidemiological study published
in the American Journal of Public Health in
1994 found 40 percent of parents who had
physically abused their child and 56 percent
who had neglected their child met lifetime
criteria for an alcohol or drug disorder.5
Substance abuse has its greatest impact on
neglect. In the 1994 study noted above,
respondents with a drug or alcohol problem
were 4.2 times as likely as those without such
a problem to have neglected their children.
In another study conducted during the 1990s,
child welfare workers were asked to identify
adults in their caseloads with either suspected
or known alcohol or illicit drug abuse problems.6 In 29 percent of the cases, a family
member abused alcohol; in 18 percent, at
least one adult abused illicit drugs. These
findings approximate those of the more
recent National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-Being (NSCAW) that 20 percent of
children in an investigation for abuse and
neglect had a mother who, by either the child
welfare workers or mothers account, was
involved with drugs or alcohol; that figure
rises to 42 percent for children who are
placed into foster care.7 These studies have
clearly established a positive relationship
between a caregivers substance abuse and
child maltreatment among children in
out-of-home care and among children in the
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Substance Abuse
Substance abuse services for adults rarely
include parenting skills. A few initiatives have
been developed to help parents in out-patient
methadone programs. A more common,
and costly, strategy, used both in the United
States and abroad, is to treat both women
and their dependent children in residential
treatment centers. I discuss below some
substance abuse programs that show promise
in teaching women how to be better mothers.
Few, however, have had rigorous evaluations.
The Focus on Families (FOF) field experiment emphasized relapse prevention for
mothers in methadone treatment. FOF
included thirty-three sessions of parenting
skills education, as well as home-based case
management services lasting about nine
months.34 Compared with mothers in the
control group, mothers receiving the program, especially those motivated enough to
initiate and follow through with at least
sixteen sessions, were able to learn effective
parenting skills. The experiment included no
explicit evaluation of child abuse prevention.
Because children who test positive for
prenatal drug exposure must, by federal law,
be referred to child welfare services, they are
a group of special interest to those examining
child abuse prevention. The Arkansas Center
for Addictions Research, Education, and
Services (CARES) provides comprehensive
residential substance abuse prevention and
treatment services to low-income pregnant
women, mothers, and their children. The
center provides various services for the
mother and her dependent children, but the
main service is parenting classes. Within
these classes the mothers discuss child
development, appropriate parental roles, and
role reversal (which occurs because parents
do not play their proper role during their
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Domestic Violence
Child-parent psychotherapy, which focuses
on relationship enhancement, appears effective in reducing the behavioral problems and
traumatic symptoms of children living with
domestic violence. Such psychotherapy has
also been shown to reduce the mothers posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) avoidance
symptoms and to allow the mother to discuss
with her child the violence that occurred.40
The effect on future child abuse and neglect
remains unexamined.
Child Conduct Problems
A growing number of evidence-based parent
training programs help parents of children at
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Richard P. Barth
learning environment, using assertive discipline, having realistic expectations, and taking
care of oneself as a parent.55 The conceptual
underpinning of Triple P is that the parent
must be self-regulatory, meaning that she
believes that she can improve the behavior of
her child through her own actions and is
confident in making decisions and problem
solving to do so.56
Triple P is now undergoing a major trial in
South Carolina with a slightly different
configuration. Though the principles are the
same, some of the levels differ slightly.
Selected Triple P, for example, is delivered as
a one-time seminar to a group. All levels
include a specific session for teen children.
Group Triple P is similar to level 2 but it
targets more specific behavioral and emotional problems and is given to a smaller
group. Level 4, Standard Triple P, also
includes Group Triple P, a Group Teen Triple
P, and Standard Stepping-Stones Triple P. The
latter level is for parents who have a developmentally disabled child. Both Group Triple P
and Group Teen Triple P are administered to
groups of parents. Standard Triple P and
Standard Stepping-Stones Triple P are
administered individually to parents in a
home or clinic setting. Finally, level 5 includes
Enhanced Triple P, which is directed to
families with several problems, and Pathways
Triple P, which is for parents who are at risk
for child abuse. Both level 5 programs are
administered individually, at home or in a
clinic.57
The results of this first major U.S. Triple P
trial are quite promising. After training more
than 600 primary care practitioners in Triple
P, and implementing the universal media
strategies in half of eighteen counties randomly assigned to Triple P in South Carolina,
Ronald Prinz found that administering Triple
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Engagement
Matthew Nock and Alan Kazdin administered
a Participant Enhancement Intervention
(PEI) to parents of oppositional, aggressive,
antisocial children, giving each parent eight
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Richard P. Barth
direction was wrong and instead of conceptualizing the question as whether parent
training should be universally delivered or
even universally available, the proper question is whether there should be a universal
approach to parent training. The promising
Triple P work in South Carolina, based on
decades of development, argues the need to
strongly consider such a redirection of the
limited parent training resources now available for preventing and responding to child
behavior problems and child abuse. Today,
access to high-quality parent training programs is limited, and few organizations have
the capacity to develop such programs on
their own.84 The multi-level approach pioneered by Triple P offers the fundamental
elements that are critical to implementing
evidence-based materials with fidelity. The
core program is carefully structured and
controlled to maintain program integrity; it is
staffed with sufficient trained personnel to
provide supervision; it is equipped with media
and marketing materials to spread the
program; and it costs less than $50 per child
(2008 dollars), making it reasonably affordable.85 To be sure, the Triple P trial in South
Carolina was not without problems. Certain
providers or systems were unable to add
effective parenting support to the menu of
services they provided because of clashes with
their own missionsometimes, too, because
of barriers to reimbursement for parenting
services. Among providers interested in the
training and able to deliver parenting support
services, many had only limited time available
for training because of other demands on
agency personnel. Any significant progress in
expanding parent training programs on the
Triple P model will require a full policy, fiscal,
and regulatory review to ensure feasibility.
A major Triple P trial among the families of
children aged four to seven in Australia
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Future Policy
Massive evidence now shows that child abuse
is associated with higher rates of spending on
health care.89 The cost-effectiveness of
investing in younger children is now broadly
accepted.90 The case for implementing parent
training programs to help reduce the high
social costs of child abuse and neglect is
strong. One of the first policy changes needed
is to increase support for research trials on
parent training to pinpoint what works. In
addition to comparing the effectiveness of
various parenting education programs, the
research trials should contrast programs that
focus on parenting education and those that
aim to reduce related risk factors.
Child welfare services agencies should be
allowed and encouraged, with incentives
from all levels of government, to change their
parent education practices as they modify
their childrens services policies. The domination of federal child welfare services funding
by worker training, reimbursement of foster
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Richard P. Barth
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Endnotes
1. Joseph Semidei, Laura F. Radel, and Catherine Nolan, Substance Abuse and Child Welfare: Clear Linkages and Promising Responses, Child Welfare 80 (2001): 10928.
2. Robert L. Pierce and Lois H. Pierce, Analysis of Sexual Abuse Hotline Reports, Child Abuse and Neglect
9 (1985): 3745.
3. Bridgett A. Besinger and others, Caregiver Substance Abuse among Maltreated Children Placed in Outof-Home Care, Child Welfare 78 (1999): 22139.
4. Nancy K. Young, Sydney L. Gardner, and Kimberly Dennis, Responding to Alcohol and Other Drug Problems in Child Welfare: Weaving Together Practice and Policy (Washington: CWLA Press, 1998).
5. Kelly Kelleher and others, Alcohol and Drug Disorders among Physically Abusive and Neglectful Parents
in a Community-Based Sample, American Journal of Public Health 84 (1994): 158690.
6. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect, Study of Child Maltreatment in Alcohol Abusing Families (Washington:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1993).
7. Claire Gibbons, Richard Barth, and Sandra L. Martin, Prevalence of Substance Abuse among In-Home
Caregivers in a U.S. Child Welfare Population: Caregiver vs. Child Welfare Worker Report, Child Abuse
& Neglect (forthcoming).
8. Ibid.
9. Stephen Magura and Alexandre B. Laudet, Parental Substance Abuse and Child Maltreatment: Review
and Implications for Intervention, Children and Youth Services Review 3 (1996): 193220.
10. Gibbons, Barth, and Martin, Prevalence of Substance Abuse (see note 7).
11. Richard P. Barth, Substance Abuse and Child Welfare Services: Research Updates and Needs, paper
presented at the National Center on Substance Abuse and Child Welfare Researchers Forum, Washington,
December 10, 2003.
12. Richard Famularo, Robert Kinscherff, and Terence Fenton, Parental Substance Abuse and the Nature of
Child Maltreatment, Child Abuse & Neglect 16 (1992): 47583.
13. Dana K. Smith and others, Child Maltreatment and Foster Care: Unpacking the Effects of Prenatal and
Postnatal Parental Substance Use, Child Maltreatment 12, no. 2 (2007): 15060.
14. Danson Jones and colleagues, When Parents with Severe Mental Illness Lose Contact with Their Children:
Are Psychiatric Symptoms or Substance Use to Blame? Journal of Loss & Trauma 13, no. 4 (2008): 26187.
15. Mark E. Courtney, Steven L. McMurtry, and Andew Zinn, Housing Problems Experienced by Recipients
of Child Welfare Services, Child Welfare 83, no. 5 (2004): 393422.
16. Jennifer F. Culhane and others, Prevalence of Child Welfare Services Involvement among Homeless and
Low-Income Mothers: A Five-Year Birth Cohort Study, Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare 30 (2003):
7995.
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113
Richard P. Barth
17. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, National
Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-Being: Children Involved with the Child Welfare Services (Baseline
Report) (Washington: Author, 2003).
18. Penny B. Jameson and others, Mother-Toddler Interaction Patterns Associated with Maternal Depression,
Development and Psychopathology 9, no. 3 (1997): 53750.
19. Casey Hoffman, Keith A. Crnic, and Jason K. Baker, Maternal Depression and Parenting: Implications for
Childrens Emergent Emotion Regulation and Behavioral Functioning, Parenting: Science and Practice 6,
no. 4 (2006): 27195.
20. Sang Kahng and others, Mothers with Serious Mental Illness: When Symptoms Decline Does Parenting
Improve? Journal of Family Psychology 22, no. 1 (2008): 16266.
21. Nicole L. Shay and John Knutson, Maternal Depression and Trait Anger as Risk Factors for Escalated
Physical Discipline, Child Maltreatment 13, no. 1 (2008): 3949.
22. David S. DeGarmo, Gerald R. Patterson, and Marion S. Forgatch, How Do Outcomes in a Specified Parent
Training Intervention Maintain or Wane over Time? Prevention Science 5, no. 2 (2004): 7389.
23. Andrea L. Hazen and others, Intimate Partner Violence among Female Caregivers of Children Reported
for Child Maltreatment, Child Abuse & Neglect 28 (2004): 30119.
24. Cecilia Casanueva and others, Quality of Maternal Parenting among Intimate-Partner Violence Victims
Involved with the Child Welfare System, Journal of Family Violence 23, no. 6 (2008): 41327. Parenting
skills were measured by the HOME-SF (this is a short form of the HOME Inventory, a well-known standardized instrument measuring the home environment).
25. DeGarmo, Patterson, and Forgatch, How Do Outcomes in a Specified Parent Training Intervention Maintain or Wane over Time? (see note 22).
26. Ibid.
27. David Fanshel, Foster Care as a 2-Tiered System, Children & Youth Services Review 14 (1992): 4960.
28. Richard Barth, Judy Wildfire, and Rebecca Green, Placement into Foster Care and the Interplay of
Urbanicity, Child Behavior Problems, and Poverty, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 76, no. 3 (2006):
35866.
29. Barbara Burns and others, Mental Health Need and Access to Mental Health Services by Youth Involved
with Child Welfare: A National Survey, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 23, no. 8 (2004): 96070.
30. Anna S. Lau and others, Abusive Parents Reports of Child Behavior Problems: Relationship to Observed
Parent-Child Interactions, Child Abuse & Neglect 30, no. 6 (2006): 63955.
31. Michael Hurlburt and others, Parent Training in Child Welfare Services: Findings from the National Survey
of Child and Adolescent Well-Being, in Child Protection: Using Research to Improve Policy and Practice,
edited by Ron Haskins, Fred Wulczyn, and M. Webb (Washington: Brookings Institution Press, 2007), pp.
81106.
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32. Burns and others, Mental Health Need and Access to Mental Health Services (see note 29); John R. Weisz
and Kristin M. Hawley, Finding, Evaluating, Refining, and Applying Empirically Supported Treatments for
Children and Adolescents, Journal of Clinical Child Psychology 27 (1998): 20515.
33. Joanne Klevens and Daniel J.Whittaker, Primary Prevention of Child Physical Abuse and Neglect: Gaps
and Promising Directions, Child Maltreatment 12, no. 4 (2007): 36477.
34. Randy Gainey and others, Teaching Parenting Skills in a Methadone Treatment Setting, Social Work
Research 31, no. 3 (2007): 18590.
35. Nicola A. Conners and others, Substance Abuse Treatment for Mothers: Treatment Outcomes and the
Impact of Length of Stay, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment 31 (2006): 44756.
36. Ibid.
37. DeGarmo, Patterson, and Forgatch, How Do Outcomes in a Specified Parent Training Intervention Maintain or Wane over Time? (see note 22).
38. Patricia Hanrahan and others, The Mothers Project for Homeless Mothers with Mental Illnesses and
Their Children: A Pilot Study, Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 28, no. 3 (2005): 29194.
39. Nancy VanDeMark and others, Children of Mothers with Histories of Substance Abuse, Mental Illness,
and Trauma, Journal of Community Psychology 33, no. 4 (2005): 44559.
40. Alicia Lieberman, Patricia Van Horn, and Chandra Ghosh Ippen, Toward Evidence-Based Treatment:
Child-Parent Psychotherapy with Preschoolers Exposed to Marital Violence, Journal of the American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 44, no. 12 (2005): 124148.
41. Richard Barth and others, Parent Training in Child Welfare Services: Planning for a More Evidence-Based
Approach to Serving Biological Parents, Research on Social Work Practice 15 (2005): 35371.
42. Carolyn Webster-Stratton and Ted Taylor, Nipping Early Risk Factors in the Bud: Preventing Substance
Abuse, Delinquency, and Violence in Adolescence through Interventions Targeted at Young Children (08
Years), Prevention Science 2, no. 3 (2001): 16592.
43. M. Jamila Reid, Carolyn Webster-Stratton, and Nazli Baydar, Halting the Development of Conduct
Problems in Head Start Children: The Effects of Parent Training, Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent
Psychology 33, no. 2 (2004): 27991.
44. Laurie Miller Brotman and others, Preventive Intervention for Preschoolers at High Risk for Antisocial
Behavior: Long-Term Effects on Child Physical Aggression and Parenting Practices, Journal of Clinical
Child & Adolescent Psychology 37, no. 2 (2008): 38696.
45. Sheila M. Eyberg, Stephan R. Boggs, and James Algina, Parent-Child Interaction Therapya Psychosocial Model for the Treatment of Young Children with Conduct Problem Behavior and Their Families,
Psychopharmacology Bulletin 31, no. 1 (1995): 8391.
46. Mark Chaffin and others, Parent-Child Interaction Therapy with Physically Abusive Parents: Efficacy for
Reducing Future Abuse Reports, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 72 (2004): 50010.
47. Brian D. Johnston and others, Healthy Steps in an Integrated Delivery System Child and Parent Outcomes at 30 Months, Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine 160 (2006): 793800.
VOL. 19 / NO. 2 / FALL 2009
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Richard P. Barth
48. Catherine Bennett and others, Home-Based Support for Disadvantaged Adult Mothers (Review), The
Cochrane Collaboration (Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd., 2007).
49. Denise Kendrick and others, Parenting Interventions and the Prevention of Unintentional Injuries in
Childhood: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis, Child Care Health and Development 34, no. 5 (2008):
68295.
50. Diane DePanfilis, Howard Dubowitz, and James Kunz, Assessing the Cost-Effectiveness of Family Connections, Child Abuse & Neglect 32, no. 3 (2008): 33551.
51. Nathan Maccoby and others, Reducing the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: Effects of a Community-Based
Campaign on Knowledge and Behavior, Journal of Community Health 3, no. 2 (1977): 10014.
52. Beti Thompson and others, Methodologic Advances and Ongoing Challenges in Designing CommunityBased Health Promotion Programs, Annual Review of Public Health 24 (2003): 31540.
53. Mathew Sanders, Warren Cann, and Carol Markie-Dadds, The Triple P-Positive Programme: A Universal
Population-Level Approach to the Prevention of Child Abuse, Child Abuse Review 12, no. 3 (2003): 15571.
54. Matthew R. Sanders, Warren Cann, and Carol Markie-Dadds, Why a Universal Population-Level Approach
to the Prevention of Child Abuse Is Essential, Child Abuse Review 12, no. 3 (2003).
55. Ibid.
56. Ibid.
57. Ronald Prinz and others, Population-Based Prevention of Child Maltreatment: The U.S. Triple P System
Population Trial (http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11121-009-0123-3 [accessed February 4, 2009]).
58. Ronald J. Prinz and others, Population-Based Prevention for Child Maltreatment: The U.S. Triple P System
Population Trial, Prevention Science, published online January 22, 2009; DOI 10.1007/s11121-009-0123-3.
59. Cheri J. Shapiro, Ronald J. Prinz, and Matthew R. Sanders, Population-Wide Parenting Intervention
Training: Initial Feasibility, Journal of Child and Family Studies 17, no. 4 (2008): 45766.
60. Ibid.
61. Matthew K. Nock and Alan E Kazdin, Randomized Controlled Trial of a Brief Intervention for Increasing
Participation in Parent Management Training, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 73 (2005):
87279.
62. Minnesota Department of Education, Early Childhood Education (http://children.state.mn.us/mde/
Learning_Support/Early_Learning_Services/Early_Childhood_Programs/Early_Childhood_Family_
Education/index.html [December 20, 2008])
63. Laura Frame, Amy Conley, and Jill D. Berrick, The Real Work Is What They Do Together: Peer Support
and Birth Parent Change, Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services 87, no. 4
(2006): 50920.
64. National Council on Crime and Delinquency, Outcome Evaluation of Parents Anonymous, unpublished
manuscript, Oakland, Calif., 2007.
65. Building the Evidence for Circle of Parents as a Model for Preventing Child Abuse and Neglect Participant Characteristics, Experiences and Outcomes, Prevention Brief 1, no. 1 (November 2007), The Ounce
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of Prevention Fund of Florida, Circle of Parents, The Florida Chapter of Prevent Child Abuse America,
(www.ounce.org/PDF/CoPEvaluationReport.pdf [accessed February 4, 2009]).
66. National Exchange Club Foundation (http://preventchildabuse.com/AboutUs.shtml [accessed August 1,
2008]).
67. Jeannette Harder, Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect: An Evaluation of a Home Visitation Parent
Aide Program Using Recidivism Data, Research on Social Work Practice 15, no. 4 (2005): 24656, Child
Abuse Prevention Center (http://www.excap.org/parentaide1 [accessed December 20, 2008]).
68. John Piacentini, Optimizing Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Childhood Psychiatric Disorders, Journal
of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 47, no. 5 (2008): 48182.
69. Patricia Moran, Deborah Ghate, and Amelia Van Der Merwe, What Works in Parenting Support? A Review
of the International Evidence, Policy Research Bureau Research Report RR574 (London: Department for
Education and Skills, July, 2004).
70. Ann Garland and others, Identifying Common Elements of Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatments
for Childrens Disruptive Behavior Problems, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry 47, no. 5 (2008): 50514.
71. Hurlburt and others, Parent Training in Child Welfare Services (see note 31).
72. Ruben G. Fukkink, Video Feedback in Widescreen: A Meta-Analysis of Family Programs, Clinical Psychology Review 28, no. 6 (2008): 90416.
73. Carolyn Webster-Stratton and Mary Hammond, Treating Children with Early-Onset Conduct Problems: A
Comparison of Child and Parent Training Interventions, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 65
(1997): 9399.
74. Mark S. Dias and others, Preventing Abusive Head Trauma among Infants and Young Children: A HospitalBased, Parent Education Program, Pediatrics 115, no. 4 (2005); Ronald Barr and others, Effectiveness of
Educational Materials Designed to Change Knowledge and Behaviors Regarding Crying and Shaken-Baby
Syndrome in Mothers of Newborns: A Randomized, Controlled Trial, Pediatrics 123, no. 3 (2009): 97280.
75. Stanley J. Huey and Antonio J. Polo, Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatments for Ethnic Minority
Youth, Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology 37, no. 1 (2008): 262301; Sandra Jo Wilson,
Mark W. Lipsey, and Haluk Soydan, Are Mainstream Programs for Juvenile Delinquency Less Effective
with Minority Youth than Majority Youth? A Meta-Analysis of Outcomes Research, Research on Social
Work Practice 13, no. 1 (2003): 326; Jeanne Miranda and others, State of the Science on Psychosocial
Interventions for Ethnic Minorities, Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 1 (2005): 11342.
76. Stephanie I. Coard and others, Considering Culturally Relevant Parenting Practices in Intervention Development and Adaptation: A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Black Parenting Strengths and Strategies
(BPSS) Program, Counseling Psychologist 35, no. 6 (2007): 797820.
77. Carolyn Webster-Stratton, M. Jamila Reid, and Mary Hammond, Preventing Conduct Problems, Promoting Social Competence: A Parent and Teacher Training Partnership in Head Start, Journal of Consulting
and Clinical Psychology 30, no. 3 (2001): 283302.
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Richard P. Barth
78. Patricia Chamberlain and others, Who Disrupts from Placement in Foster and Kinship Care? Child
Abuse & Neglect 30, no. 4 (2006): 40924.
79. DeGarmo, Patterson, and Forgatch, How Do Outcomes in a Specified Parent Training Intervention Maintain or Wane over Time? (see note 22).
80. Marjukka Pajulo and others, Enhancing the Effectiveness of Residential Treatment for Substance Abusing
Pregnant and Parenting Women: Focus on Maternal Reflective Functioning and Mother-Child Relationship,
Infant Mental Health Journal 27, no. 5 (2006): 44865.
81. Jennifer W. Kaminski and others, A Meta-Analytic Review of Components Associated with Parent Training
Program Effectiveness, Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 36, no. 4 (2008): 56789.
82. Chaffin and others, Parent-Child Interaction Therapy with Physically Abusive Parents (see note 46).
83. Leyla Faw Stambaugh and others, Outcomes from Wraparound and Multisystemic Therapy in a Center
for Mental Health Services System-of-Care Demonstration Site, Journal of Emotional and Behavioral
Disorders 15, no. 3 (2007): 14355.
84. Delbert S. Elliott and Sharon Mihalic, Issues in Disseminating and Replicating Effective Prevention
Programs, Prevention Science 5 (2004): 4753.
85. Shapiro, Prinz, and Sanders, Population-Wide Parenting Intervention Training: Initial Feasibility (see
note 59); Catherine Mihalopoulos and others, Does the Triple P-Positive Parenting Program Provide
Value for Money? Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry 41, no. 3 (2007): 23946.
86. Matthew Sanders and others, Every Family: A Population Approach to Reducing Behavioral and Emotional Problems in Children Making the Transition to School, Journal of Primary Prevention 29, no. 3
(2008): 197222.
87. Ibid.
88. John R. Lutzker and Kathryn M. Bigelow, Reducing Child Maltreatment: A Guidebook for Parent Services
(New York: Guilford Press, 2002).
89. Robert F. Anda and others, The Enduring Effects of Abuse and Related Adverse Experiences in Childhood
A Convergence of Evidence from Neurobiology and Epidemiology, European Archives of Psychiatry
and Clinical Neuroscience 256, no. 3 (2006): 17486.
90. James J. Heckman, The Economics, Technology, and Neuroscience of Human Capability Formation,
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104, no. 33 (2007):
1325055.
91. Peter Luongo, Outpatient Incentive Pilot, paper presented to the Maryland Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Administration, Management Conference, 2007 (maryland-adaa.org/ka/ka-3.cfm?content_item_id=1592
[accessed December 2008]).
92. Boaz Shulruf, Claire OLoughlin, and Hilary Tolley, Parenting Education and Support Policies and Their
Consequences in Selected OECD Countries, Children and Youth Services Review (forthcoming) (www.
hm-treasury.gov.uk/d/parenting_fund_202.pdf [accessed December 2008]).
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