Wirksamkeit des Stepping Stones Triple P Elterntrainings als zusätzliche Intervention in der Behandlung von Autismus-Spektrum-Störungen - Effekte auf das Erziehungsverhalten
In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurden die Effekte des Stepping Stones Triple P (SSTP) Gruppenelterntrainings auf die Eltern-Kind Interaktion in Familien mit Kindern mit einer Autismus-Spektrum-Störung (ASS) untersucht mit dem Schwerpunkt auf dem Erziehungsverhalten. Bedeutende Aspekte der Eltern-Kind...
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Format: | Doctoral Thesis |
Language: | German |
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Philipps-Universität Marburg
2017
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Online Access: | PDF Full Text |
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Table of Contents:
This study explored the effect of the Stepping Stones Triple P (SSTP) group parent
training on parent-child interactions in families of children with Autism-Spectrum-
Disorders (ASD) with a focus on parenting behavior. Significant aspects of parent-child
interactions and especially parenting are the concrete parenting behavior, parental selfefficacy
and parenting stress. Parenting behavior plays a significant role in the
emergence and maintenance of externalizing and internalizing disorders. Parental selfefficacy
is strongly associated with parenting behavior and has shown to mediate the
association between adverse environmental factors and the development of children.
Stressed parents frequently use dysfunctional parenting strategies and are impaired in
their mental health in the long-term. Reciprocal relations and coercive processes can
lead to chronification of behavioral disorders. Behavioral parent trainings have shown to
be an effective and economic intervention for behavioral disturbances and affect
parenting variables in a positive manner.
ASD are considered to be neurodevelopmental disorders and frequently come along
with a series of comorbid somatic and psychological abnormalities. Parents are
especially challenged by comorbid behavioral disturbances. For parents of children with
ASD, similar influences on parenting can be assumed, as for parents of children with
behavioral disturbances. Some studies have already shown that behavioral parent
trainings can be a reasonable intervention in the treatment of ASD. Studies with an
objective ascertainment of parent-child interactions via observations are scarce.
In the present study 16 parents of children with ASD took part. Within a waitlist-controlgroup
design, parenting variables were assessed three month before, shortly before and
shortly after the parent training. Structured observations, which were implemented
shortly before and after the parent trainings, provided additional information about
changes in parent-child interactions. For this purpose an existing observation system
was adapted. This is the first study on the effectiveness of the SSTP group parent
training in the treatment of ASD, which includes a structured observation of parent-child
interactions.
Results suggest significant changes in self-rated parenting behaviors for overreaction.
Additionally there was an increase in positive strategies for praise in the observation of
parent-child interactions. Parents reported a relevant reduction of parenting stress. For
further parenting strategies and for parental self-efficacy the results were ambiguous.
The SSTP parent training was accepted by the participants.
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The results provide additional evidence for the effectiveness of the SSTP parent training
on parenting behavior and parenting stress in the treatment of ASD. The impact on the
development of the children and on mental health of the parents is discussed.
Methodological shortcomings within the parent-child observation system provide hints
for further applications.