Elizabeth Jane Doery, Jay Varcoe, Michelle Benstead, Matin Ghayour-Minaie, Rebecca Sheils, Siobhan Kavanagh, Keriann Little, Allie Pert, John W. Toumbourou
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Program logic of a service collaboration to support parents with intellectual disability
Background
This article describes the Steps to Confident Parenting (SCP) program, developed by an Australian family service consortium. The SCP integrates home-based and case-management services to enhance the skills of parents with a diagnosed or suspected intellectual disability/cognitive impairment and to prevent child protection interventions.
Method
‘Program explication’ methodology documented the components/activities, and underpinning evidence for this practitioner designed service through interviews with nine agency staff. A literature review evaluated evidence for the implicit program benefit theory.
Results and Conclusion
The SCP comprised five logically consistent components—Targeted Referral, Assessments, Initial Consultation, Program Delivery, Closure and Follow-up. Components generally had ‘some’ supportive evidence, however there was a ‘lack of’ evidence for Closure and Follow-up. In the context of a partnership seeking to build the evidence for the SCP, it was recommended that a protocol for a randomised trial evaluation with longer term follow-up be drafted by the consortia.
期刊介绍:
JARID is an international, peer-reviewed journal which draws together findings derived from original applied research in intellectual disabilities. The journal is an important forum for the dissemination of ideas to promote valued lifestyles for people with intellectual disabilities. It reports on research from the UK and overseas by authors from all relevant professional disciplines. It is aimed at an international, multi-disciplinary readership. Topics covered include community living, quality of life, challenging behaviour, communication, sexuality, medication, ageing, supported employment, family issues, mental health, physical health, autism, economic issues, social networks, staff stress, staff training, epidemiology and service provision.