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Arbeit mit Vätern zur Prävention von Kindesmisshandlung Eine Pilotevaluation des Caring Dads Programms in Deutschland
Author(s) -
Christoph Liel,
Marlene Koch,
Andreas Eickhorst
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
praxis der kinderpsychologie und kinderpsychiatrie
Language(s) - German
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.158
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 2196-8225
pISSN - 0032-7034
DOI - 10.13109/prkk.2021.70.2.115
Subject(s) - aggression , psychology , medicine , intervention (counseling) , longitudinal study , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , psychiatry , pathology
Working with Fathers to Prevent Child Abuse. A Pilot Evaluation of the Caring Dads Program in Germany Selective and indicated prevention programs for fathers at high risk of (repeated) child maltreatment are lacking within early childhood intervention and child protection. The Canadian Caring Dads Program has been started in Germany in 2008. The aim of this study was to examine fathers who participated in a Caring Dads program in Düsseldorf, Hanover or Groß-Gerau until 2016. The study of n = 60 fathers and n = 34 mothers included the longitudinal examination of self-reported aggression, parenting behaviors and co-parenting in fathers as well as quality of life and co-parenting in mothers, the comparison of fathers participating in the program in Germany and Canada (n = 59/64) and a postal catamnesis (n = 20). Results have shown mean improvements in paternal aggression (d = .39) and parenting behaviors (d = .80, categorized: φ = .46) as well as maternal co-parenting (d = .46) and paternal behavior toward the partner (d = .47). In one-fourth to one-third of fathers at risk-levels, improvements controlled for measurement errors by the Reliable Change Index were clinically significant. German fathers reported higher motivation for change (t1/t2: d = 1.37/1.59) and verbal aggression (t1/t2: d = 1.29/1.36) compared to Canadian fathers. The catamnesis showed subjectively significant improvements in family relationships and parenting from the paternal point of view. The evaluation does not provide any evidence of culturally induced barriers of implementing Caring Dads in Germany.

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