9 results on '"Marion S. Forgatch"'
Search Results
2. Feasibility of Implementation of a Parenting Intervention with Karen Refugees Resettled from Burma
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Jaime Ballard, Elizabeth Wieling, and Marion S. Forgatch
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Adult ,Male ,Stress Disorders, Traumatic ,050103 clinical psychology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,Refugee ,MEDLINE ,Child Behavior ,Myanmar ,Compliance (psychology) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intervention (counseling) ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Parent-Child Relations ,Child ,Psychiatry ,Problem Behavior ,Refugees ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,Emotional regulation ,Mental health ,United States ,030227 psychiatry ,Clinical Psychology ,Distress ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Family Therapy ,Female ,Relocation ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Parents and children exposed to war and relocation have high rates of negative relational and mental health outcomes. This study tested the feasibility of implementing an adapted evidence-based parenting intervention for contexts of trauma and relocation stress. Eleven Karen refugee caregivers from Burma participated in the intervention. Participants and a focal child completed ethnographic interviews as well as structured assessments at baseline and follow-up. Caregivers reported changes in their teaching, directions, emotional regulation, discipline, and child compliance. Children reported changes in these areas and in positive parent involvement. Caregivers reported higher mental health distress immediately after the intervention, potentially due to increased awareness. Researchers made personalized referrals for counseling services as needed. Children reported a decrease in mental health symptoms.
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- 2017
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3. Parent Management Training-Oregon Model: Adapting Intervention with Rigorous Research
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John Kjøbli and Marion S. Forgatch
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Adult ,Male ,Parents ,050103 clinical psychology ,Social Psychology ,Applied psychology ,Poison control ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Telehealth ,Interpersonal communication ,Suicide prevention ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,Child Rearing ,Intervention (counseling) ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,Parenting ,Child rearing ,Norway ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Clinical Psychology ,Parent training ,Female ,Psychology ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Parent Management Training-Oregon Model (PMTO(®) ) is a set of theory-based parenting programs with status as evidence-based treatments. PMTO has been rigorously tested in efficacy and effectiveness trials in different contexts, cultures, and formats. Parents, the presumed agents of change, learn core parenting practices, specifically skill encouragement, limit setting, monitoring/supervision, interpersonal problem solving, and positive involvement. The intervention effectively prevents and ameliorates children's behavior problems by replacing coercive interactions with positive parenting practices. Delivery format includes sessions with individual families in agencies or families' homes, parent groups, and web-based and telehealth communication. Mediational models have tested parenting practices as mechanisms of change for children's behavior and found support for the theory underlying PMTO programs. Moderating effects include children's age, maternal depression, and social disadvantage. The Norwegian PMTO implementation is presented as an example of how PMTO has been tailored to reach diverse populations as delivered by multiple systems of care throughout the nation. An implementation and research center in Oslo provides infrastructure and promotes collaboration between practitioners and researchers to conduct rigorous intervention research. Although evidence-based and tested within a wide array of contexts and populations, PMTO must continue to adapt to an ever-changing world.
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- 2016
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4. Preparing the Field for Feasibility Testing of a Parenting Intervention for War-Affected Mothers in Northern Uganda
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Christopher J. Mehus, Elizabeth Wieling, Marion S. Forgatch, Achan Laura, Verena Ertl, Julia Möllerherm, Frank Neuner, Cigdem Yumbul, and Claudia Catani
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Stress Disorders, Traumatic ,Warfare ,050103 clinical psychology ,Social Psychology ,Implementation and Dissemination Science ,Psychological intervention ,Mothers ,Poison control ,Education, Nonprofessional ,Suicide prevention ,Occupational safety and health ,Global mental health ,Nursing ,Intervention (counseling) ,Humans ,Uganda ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Cultural Competency ,Program Development ,Child ,Poverty ,Motivation ,Travel ,Parenting ,Prevention ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Mental health ,Mother-Child Relations ,Clinical Psychology ,trauma ,Research Design ,050902 family studies ,Child, Preschool ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,War ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,Needs Assessment ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
In this article, we discuss the successful implementation of an adapted evidence-based parenting intervention for families affected by two decades of war in Northern Uganda. The adaptation and adoption of such interventions to support mental health and family functioning is widely endorsed by prevention scientists and considered a priority in global mental health. The preparation and early adoption phases of engaging with a highly vulnerable community affected by war trauma are documented in this paper along with a discussion of the steps taken to adapt a parenting intervention for cultural and contextual fit. This study is a component of an overall program of research aimed at reducing the long-term negative effects of war on parenting practices and childhood outcomes, which have considerable implications for preventing mental, neurological, and substance-use disorders. The processes described here cover a 4-year period culminating in the implementation of the nine-session Enhancing Family Connection intervention piloted with a group of 14 mothers. The lessons in cultural adaptation have been valuable and the feasibility results promising for further testing the intervention.
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- 2015
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5. Treatment effectiveness of PMTO for children's behavior problems in Iceland: Assessing parenting practices in a randomized controlled trial
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Marion S. Forgatch, Margrét Sigmarsdóttir, David S. DeGarmo, and Edda Vikar Guðmundsdóttir
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Male ,Parents ,Iceland ,Poison control ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Suicide prevention ,Article ,Occupational safety and health ,law.invention ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Randomized controlled trial ,Behavior Therapy ,law ,Injury prevention ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Child ,General Psychology ,Parenting ,Human factors and ergonomics ,General Medicine ,Treatment Outcome ,Child, Preschool ,Parent training ,Female ,Observational study ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
FINDINGS are presented from an Icelandic randomized control trial (RCT) evaluating parent management training - Oregon model (PMTO™), a parent training intervention designed to improve parenting practices and reduce child behavior problems. In a prior report from this effectiveness study that focused on child outcomes, children in the PMTO condition showed greater reductions in reported child adjustment problems relative to the comparison group. The present report focuses on observed parenting practices as the targeted outcome, with risk by treatment moderators also tested. It was hypothesized that mothers assigned to the PMTO condition would show greater gains in pre-post parenting practices relative to controls. The sample was recruited from five municipalities throughout Iceland and included 102 participating families of children with behavior problems. Cases were referred by community professionals and randomly assigned to either PMTO (n = 51) or community services usually offered (n = 51). Child age ranged from 5 to 12 years; 73% were boys. Contrary to expectations, findings showed no main effects for changes in maternal parenting. However, evaluation of risk by treatment moderators showed greater gains in parenting practices for mothers who increased in depressed mood within the PMTO group relative to their counterparts in the comparison group. This finding suggests that PMTO prevented the expected damaging effects of depression on maternal parenting. Failure to find hypothesized main effects may indicate that there were some unobserved factors regarding the measurement and a need to further adapt the global observational procedures to Icelandic culture. Language: en
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- 2013
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6. Culturally Adapting an Evidence-Based Parenting Intervention for Latino Immigrants: The Need to Integrate Fidelity and Cultural Relevance
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Guillermo Bernal, Deborah Bybee, Ana Rocío Escobar-Chew, Melanie Domenech-Rodriguez, Lisa Tams, Marion S. Forgatch, Cris M. Sullivan, Brian Dates, Kendal Holtrop, and Jose Ruben Parra Cardona
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Evidence-based practice ,Minority group ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,Ethnic group ,Psychological intervention ,Community-based participatory research ,Poison control ,Acculturation ,Developmental psychology ,Clinical Psychology ,Medicine ,business ,Social psychology ,Cultural competence ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Latinos constitute the largest ethnic minority group in the United States. However, the cultural adaptation and dissemination of evidence-based parenting interventions among Latino populations continues to be scarce despite extensive research that demonstrates the long-term positive effects of these interventions. The purpose of this article is threefold: (1) justify the importance of cultural adaptation research as a key strategy to disseminate efficacious interventions among Latinos, (2) describe the initial steps of a program of prevention research with Latino immigrants aimed at culturally adapting an evidence-based intervention informed by parent management training principles, and (3) discuss implications for advancing cultural adaptation prevention practice and research, based on the initial feasibility and cultural acceptability findings of the current investigation.
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- 2012
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7. Early development of delinquency within divorced families: evaluating a randomized preventive intervention trial
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,education ,Child Behavior Disorders ,Models, Psychological ,Personality Assessment ,law.invention ,Developmental psychology ,Randomized controlled trial ,Behavior Therapy ,Divorce ,law ,Intervention (counseling) ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Juvenile delinquency ,Parenting styles ,Humans ,Family ,Child ,Problem Solving ,Child rearing ,Middle Aged ,Child development ,Mother-Child Relations ,Multivariate Analysis ,Juvenile Delinquency ,Linear Models ,Parent training ,Female ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This paper reports on an experimental test of coercion theory early onset model of delinquency. Results are from the Oregon Divorce Study-II, a randomized preventive intervention trial with a sample of 238 recently separated mothers and their sons in early elementary school. The objective was to experimentally manipulate parenting variables hypothesized to influence development of delinquent behaviors. Multiple-method assessment spanned 36 months. Because the intervention focused on parent training, we expected that any intervention effects on changes in child outcomes would be mediated by hypothesized intervening mechanisms. Linear growth models showed significantly greater reduction in boys' delinquency and deviant peer affiliation in the experimental group relative to the controls. Subsequent models using no method overlap in constructs demonstrated that the intervention effect on delinquency operated through growth in parenting and reduction in deviant peer affiliation.
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- 2005
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8. Confidant support and maternal distress: Predictors of parenting practices for divorced mothers
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Emotional support ,Social Psychology ,Anthropology ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Parenting problems ,Negativity effect ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Association (psychology) ,Psychology ,Maternal distress ,Structural equation modeling ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
Following divorce, mothers may seek support for their parenting efforts. This study investigates confidant support from friends, family, and intimate partners, along with maternal distress, as predictors of parenting practices for divorced women. In a multimethod study of 138 mothers and their support confidants, we employed a measure of observed support that included emotional support, supportive behaviors, and likability of the support provider. These qualities were scored from dyadic problem-solving discussions of the mother's personal and parenting problems. Our main hypothesis was supported: Controlling for maternal distress and confidant negativity, observed confidant support predicted higher levels of effective parenting practices. Confidant negativity was associated with maternal distress, and we found a marginal relationship between maternal distress and parenting. Confidant negativity had an indirect association with parenting by predicting lower levels of observed support. Overall, 36% of the variance in parenting practices and 24% of the variance in observed support was explained in a multimethod structural equation model specified with minimal overlap.
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- 1997
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9. Adult Problem Solving: Contributor to Parenting and Child Outcomes in Divorced Families
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Marion S. Forgatch and David S. DeGarmo
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Sociology and Political Science ,Macro level ,Social domain ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Context (language use) ,Marital separation ,Variance (accounting) ,Latent variable ,Psychology ,Social learning theory ,Outcome (game theory) ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Developmental psychology - Abstract
This cross-sectional study extends child outcome models by focusing on factors in the adult social domain as contributors to parenting. The sample included 138 divorced mothers, their focal sons, and their support confidants assessed approximately 5 years after marital separation. The multimethod latent variable analysis tested a hypothesized progression stating observed confidant support would enhance problem solving outcomes achieved by mothers and confidants. Resolving parenting and personal issues for the mother was expected to benefit parenting practices (i.e., monitoring, discipline, and mother/child problem solving), which in turn would predict a macro level measure of child antisocial behavior. Analysis of the simplex model supported the progression. The final model explained 36% of the variance in antisocial behavior, 15% of the variance in parenting, and 53% of the variance in problem solving outcome. Dyads with cohabiting partners scored higher on problem solving outcomes than did dyads with friends or family members. The model is discussed in the context of social interactional and social learning theory.
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- 1997
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