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A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect

Publication ,  Journal Article
Warren, JM; Hanstock, TL; Hunt, SA; Halpin, SA; Warner-Metzger, CM; Gurwitch, RH
Published in: Child Protection and Practice
August 1, 2024

Background: To optimize PCIT treatment with children exposed to abuse and neglect, PCIT with Trauma-Directed Interaction (PCIT with TDI) was created. Objective: The current study was a quasi-experimental cohort study (PCIT and PCIT with TDI treatment groups) with pre/post-treatment comparisons. The study was conducted in a statutory child protection agency and was a naturalistic evaluation of the outcomes achieved by this service. The outcomes under investigation included caregiver and child posttraumatic stress symptoms, child behavior problems, parenting stress, caregiver mental health, child protection notifications, and placement permanency goals. Participants and setting: Children were included in the study if they were aged between 2 and 7 years, had behavioral difficulties or trauma symptoms and/or their caregivers were experiencing parenting stress. Methods: Families were allocated to treatment group by clinician availability/preference (i.e., preference allocation). Caregivers were asked to report on child posttraumatic symptoms and behavioral issues; and to self-report on posttraumatic stress, general stress, parenting stress, and depression and anxiety at prescribed points in treatment. Findings: Sixty-eight children and their caregivers were treated with either PCIT (n = 22) or PCIT with TDI (n = 46). Statistically significant changes were observed for both treatment conditions for some of the outcomes of interest for both children (i.e., child behavioral problems, posttraumatic stress) and their caregivers (i.e., general stress, posttraumatic stress). There was no significant main effect of treatment on any of the outcomes of interest. Conclusion: Future research should include a randomized controlled trial to adequately determine the efficacy of PCIT versus PCIT with TDI with this population.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Child Protection and Practice

DOI

EISSN

2950-1938

Publication Date

August 1, 2024

Volume

2
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Warren, J. M., Hanstock, T. L., Hunt, S. A., Halpin, S. A., Warner-Metzger, C. M., & Gurwitch, R. H. (2024). A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect. Child Protection and Practice, 2. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chipro.2024.100028
Warren, J. M., T. L. Hanstock, S. A. Hunt, S. A. Halpin, C. M. Warner-Metzger, and R. H. Gurwitch. “A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect.” Child Protection and Practice 2 (August 1, 2024). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chipro.2024.100028.
Warren JM, Hanstock TL, Hunt SA, Halpin SA, Warner-Metzger CM, Gurwitch RH. A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect. Child Protection and Practice. 2024 Aug 1;2.
Warren, J. M., et al. “A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect.” Child Protection and Practice, vol. 2, Aug. 2024. Scopus, doi:10.1016/j.chipro.2024.100028.
Warren JM, Hanstock TL, Hunt SA, Halpin SA, Warner-Metzger CM, Gurwitch RH. A naturalistic evaluation of parent-child interaction therapy (PCIT) and PCIT with trauma-directed interaction (PCIT with TDI) in Australian children exposed to abuse and neglect. Child Protection and Practice. 2024 Aug 1;2.

Published In

Child Protection and Practice

DOI

EISSN

2950-1938

Publication Date

August 1, 2024

Volume

2