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“Fostering” Effective Foster Parent Training Programs : Parent-Child Interaction Therapy Adaptations for the Child Welfare Setting
Author(s) -
Robin C. Han,
Christopher K. Owen,
Corey Lieneman,
Cheryl B. McNeil
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the open family studies journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1874-9224
DOI - 10.2174/1874922402012010010
Subject(s) - coaching , welfare , foster care , parent training , psychological intervention , context (archaeology) , psychology , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , medicine , intervention (counseling) , psychotherapist , nursing , psychiatry , political science , paleontology , law , biology
Foster parents face considerable challenges in caring for children in the child welfare system, many of whom have significant behavioral difficulties [1]. Foster parents often lack the training and support needed to manage these externalizing behaviors, which contribute to parenting stress and are highly predictive of placement breakdowns [2, 3]. Although child welfare agencies provide foster parents with pre-service training experiences, they often lack the capacity and financial resources to implement gold standard, evidence-based interventions that address child behavior difficulties. Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) has been well-established as an empirically supported treatment for disruptive behavior, yet standard delivery of PCIT to children in the foster care system is often impractical due to time, financial, childcare, and personnel constraints. Adaptations of PCIT for the foster care setting may remove some of these barriers to treatment. These adaptations have typically retained the parent-coaching principles inherent to PCIT but replaced the traditional 12to 20-week format with a shorter, less intensive treatment regimen in order to maintain feasibility within the child welfare context. Preliminary findings from studies using abbreviated formats of PCIT suggest effectiveness of such adaptations in reducing externalizing behavior in foster children and maintaining behavioral improvements several months after the end of the treatment.

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