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Perfection ffor parents

Posted: 28 October 2004 | Subscribe Online


Deborah Ghate is director of the Policy Research Bureau, an independent centre for applied social policy research on children, young people and families. She is directing the national evaluation of On Track for the DfES.

Vincent La Placa is a research fellow at the Policy Research Bureau with a strong interest in the family, government policy and reform of the welfare state.

Across the developed world, policy and practice interest in family support has burgeoned over the past 10 years. Driven by two key green papers, Supporting Families (1998) and Every Child Matters (2003), initiatives in the UK, such as Sure Start and the Children's Fund, are expanding local provision.

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Yet there has been little research that systematically sifts and draws together the mass of international evidence on the effectiveness of parenting support. Most reviews either cover a small part of the field in great detail, or else range widely but superficially over the territory.

In 2003 the Home Office commissioned a review of the international evaluation literature on a wide range of parenting support interventions, drawing out key messages for policy, practice and research. Drawing on more than 2,000 studies, the review provides a broad overview of the field. The resulting report was published last month together with an online database of some of the key studies on which the conclusions are based.

The review found evidence of success for early intervention (the primary prevention of parenting difficulties) and later intervention (the therapeutic end of the spectrum). While early intervention tends to deliver more durable outcomes for children, late intervention is better than none and may be vital for parents dealing with intolerable stress.

Both universal and targeted interventions have successful outcomes. Open access services can help with difficulties at the milder and more frequent end of the spectrum, while targeting is more effective for parents in high-risk groups.

Brief, low-level interventions have successfully delivered information and advice to parents, and can achieve change in simple parenting behaviours, such as safety in the home. However, more severe problems require longer-duration services, often accompanied by follow-up or booster sessions. Successful interventions match parents' level of need with the type, duration and intensity of programme. Success is enhanced when the intervention has a sound theoretical basis. In other words, effective services have clear goals and a clear model of the mechanism of change that will deliver those goals.

Successful services tend to have clearly specified, concrete objectives as well as broadly framed general aims, which also makes them more amenable to monitoring and evaluation. Programme fidelity also matters, and services are most effective when they stick to a consistent delivery plan for all users, supported by a detailed written manual to guide practitioners.

Many notably successful services have multimode designs - for example, combining informal group discussion sessions with one-to-one in-home support, and tapping into a variety of learning styles for parents (videos, written materials, interactive group sessions and so on). However, the mode of delivery (whether group-based or one to one) needs to be carefully selected to reflect the needs of users: group work may be too public for some very needy parents.

Working together or in parallel with different family members (parents and children, both parents and so on) also seems a promisingapproach. It may even be counterproductive to work with one family member only, as the learning achieved may be undone once the service user tries to put it into action at home if all members are not signed up to making changes.

Over and again research shows that services that pay close attention to getting, keeping and engaging parents report better outcomes. In other words, how services are delivered may matter almost as much as what is delivered. Carefully planned content counts for little if parents fail to attend, drop out or fail to make a meaningful connection with the service.
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Awareness of parents' personal circumstances, including gender and culture, is important for making services acceptable to individuals, and a good understanding of the background problems in their lives is an essential element of preparation. Indeed, until pressing difficulties such as poor housing, debt and so on are addressed, it can be difficult for stressed parents to benefit from parenting support.

Parenting support in a variety of forms can achieve positive changes for parents and children in difficulty, but we are not always clear exactly how or why some forms of support are effective, or which parts of often complex service packages are the ones that contribute most to the positive outcomes.

And while the research suggests short-term change is often an outcome of parenting support, we are hazy about whether the effects of intervention are sustained over time.

We also have next to no information about children's perspectives on the effectiveness of parenting support, even though they are the intended ultimate beneficiaries.

Much of the research still fails to capture robust evidence on diversity within parents, such as the differential needs and outcomes for fathers, or for parents from different cultural and ethnic groups.

We also need much more robust, home-grown research. Much of the evidence on which UK service planners rely comes from the US even though the applicability of research results from the US to the different cultural and social context of the UK is unclear.

The enhanced role of the state in recent years in scrutinising parenting and supporting parents in difficulties only underlines the need to know more about what most directly affects the success of interventions - including the government's wider economic and social policies.

Policymakers need to understand what promotes the effectiveness of parenting interventions and develop policy that meets the aims of parenting support services. This means continuing to address, for instance, the social and economic inequalities which make parenting more difficult, as well as expanding access to support services throughout the family life cycle.

ABSTRACT

Parenting programmes are booming as never before, but what works across the wide range of services that fall under the general label of parenting support? Based on a review of international evaluation research, this article looks at some of the key messages for practice. 

FURTHER READING

  • P Moran, D Ghate and A Van der Merwe, What Works in Parenting Support? A Review of the International Evidence, DfES 2004. Available from DfES Publications on 0845 602 2260 or at www.prb.org.uk
  • An executive summary of the main findings is also available, and an on-line database of key studies can be accessed at www.prb.org.uk

CONTACT THE AUTHORS

E-mail dghate@prb.org.uk or vlaplaca@prb.org.uk For enquiries about the report, e-mail hhauari@prb.org.uk   



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