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Evaluating the effectiveness of a parent training protocol based on an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy philosophy of parenting

APA Citation

O’Brien, K. M. (2011). Evaluating the effectiveness of a parent training protocol based on an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy philosophy of parenting (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of North Texas, Texas.

Publication Topic
ACT: Empirical
Publication Type
Dissertation
Language
English
Keyword(s)
Acceptance and commitment therapy, parenting, values
Abstract

Thirty-four parents were referred by their CPS caseworkers to participate in one of two ACT for Parenting workshops. These workshops followed a 12 hour treatment protocol based on an acceptance and commitment therapy philosophy of parenting. Briefly, an ACT philosophy of parenting maintains that effective parenting requires awareness and acceptance of thoughts and feelings as they occur in the context of the parent-child relationship. An ACT philosophy of parenting also relies heavily on the identification and commitment to parenting values. Participants were asked to track acceptance and valuing behavior on a daily basis for 25 days prior to the intervention and 25 days post-intervention, as well as to complete a package of self-report instruments designed to measure both ACT specific and general psychological processes, at three different points (pre-, post- and follow-up). Nineteen parents received the treatment, and of those, seventeen provided follow-up data 3-4 months post-intervention. Results indicate statistically significant changes in the expected directions for scores on the BASC-2 Externalizing Composite as well as on the Meta-Valuing Measure. A total of 10 parents also evidenced clinically significant change in the expected directions on a variety of outcome measures.