This project is a study funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to develop and pilot test an adapted parenting intervention to decrease excessive/inappropriate screen media use in young children with externalizing behavior problems.
The goal of this study is to develop and pilot test an adapted screen time intervention for parents of young children with externalizing behavior problems. As young children's access and exposure to different types of screen media devices has increased, so has public health concern around the links between unhealthy early screen media use (including excessive use and exposure to inappropriate content) and poor child outcomes. Research shows that exposure to screen media and externalizing behavior problems in young children are linked. Externalizing behavior problems also present a significant barrier to parents attempting to adhere to screen media use recommendations. Despite these public health concerns, screen media use interventions have not yet specifically targeted children with externalizing behavior problems. To address this need, the investigators propose to explore a novel approach to intervening around screen time, by adapting a behavioral parenting intervention designed for parents of children with externalizing behavior problems to integrate content around screen time. Leveraging an existing evidence-based parenting intervention will allow for the intervention to target parenting generally, as well as screen time specific parenting, without requiring additional resources. This study will focus on adapting a group-based parenting intervention, the School Readiness Parenting Program (SRPP). The SRPP is an 8-week parenting intervention based on a group Parent-Child Interaction Therapy model. In total, 55 parents of preschool-aged children with externalizing behavior problems will be recruited. Following a development phase, the investigators will conduct a small open trial (n = 15) to assess the feasibility of the screen time adapted intervention and families' satisfaction and response to treatment. At this phase, the investigators will also pilot a multimodal method of tracking child screen use using objective data from mobile devices and parent-completed media use logs. Upon making modifications based on results of the open trial and feedback from an external advisory panel of experts and community stakeholders, a pilot randomized controlled trial (n = 40) will follow. Parents will be randomly assigned to receive either the screen time adapted SRPP (n = 20) or the original SRPP (n = 20) program. Assessment measures will be completed at prettest, posttest, and at a 1 month follow up. The investigators will examine feasibility and acceptability of the screen time adapted intervention in the randomized controlled trial. The investigators will also examine children's screen use patterns, including overall screen time, proportion of screen time that is educational, and frequency of parent-child co-use of screen media. In an exploratory fashion, the investigators will examine the effect of the intervention on child externalizing behavior problems.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
44
For the screen time adapted parenting intervention, screen time intervention components will be infused into the SRPP (described below) to address three primary areas shown in research to play an important role in healthy screen media use: (1) reducing and managing screen time use; (2) maximizing benefits of screen time content; and (3) promoting positive parent-child interactions during co-use of screen media. Psychoeducation and practice of these strategies will be incorporated into sessions of the SRPP in which relevant behavioral concepts are addressed.The screen time adapted parenting intervention will utilize the same format (large group, 8 weekly 1.5 hour sessions) as the SRPP.
The SRPP is an 8-week parenting program for parents of preschool aged children with externalizing behavior problems. The SRPP targets child externalizing behavior problems specifically, as well as to help parents promote children's school readiness skills. The SRPP follows a group Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) model and also uses motivational interviewing and modelling problem solving approaches. The SRPP utilizes a large group format (10-15 parents) with weekly sessions lasting 1.5 hours. The SRPP curriculum contains traditional aspects of behavioral management strategies (e.g., improving parenting skills and the parent-child relationship; discipline strategies such as time out). Specific sessions of the SRPP also directly target parental interactions during children's learning activities and setting up homework and household structure and routines. In its original form, SRPP does not address children's screen time.
Florida International University
Miami, Florida, United States
Child Screen Media Use (Time)
Child screen media use will be measured with parent-reported data on screen use duration (including TV and other screen devices) and content. The outcome variable will be total screen use per weekend day.
Time frame: Change from baseline (week 0) to posttest (week 8) and follow-up (week 16)
Child Screen Media Use (Proportion Educational)
The proportion of child screen media use that parents report is educational.
Time frame: Change from baseline (week 0) to posttest (week 8) and follow-up (week 16)
Treatment Attitude Inventory (TAI)
The TAI is a parent-report measure that assesses parent satisfaction with treatment. Test-retest reliability over 4 months and correlations between the TAI and both parent-rating scales and observational measures of treatment change have been demonstrated. The TAI total score will be administered to assess parent satisfaction with the intervention. The minimum value is 0 and the maximum is 50, with higher scores indicating better satisfaction.
Time frame: Posttest (Week 8)
Perceived Parental Efficacy Scale
Parents' perceived efficacy in managing children's screen time will be assessed using the Perceived Parental Efficacy subscale of the Parent Perceptions of Technology Scale (PPTS), which assesses parents' self-efficacy in using electronic media and managing children's screen time (e.g., "I won't bother setting parental controls or passwords because my kids will "hack" around them."). The 5 items are rated on a Likert scale from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). Items were reverse scored and averaged to create the overall scale score, with higher scores meaning better perceived efficacy.
Time frame: Change from baseline (week 0) to posttest (week 8) and follow-up (week 16).
Technology-related Parenting Scale
The Technology-related Parenting Scale is an 8-item self-report survey assessing parents' use of rules (e.g., "I set limits on the amount of time") and enforcement strategies ("I use passwords on these devices") for children's technology use on a 3-point scale from 0 (not true) to 2 (very true). Items will be averaged to create an overall score, with higher scores meaning more limit setting.
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Time frame: Change from baseline (week 0) to posttest (week 8) and follow-up (week 16)