Parenting, mental health and economic pathways to prevention of violence against children in South Africa
- PMID: 32763649
- PMCID: PMC10782842
- DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2020.113194
Parenting, mental health and economic pathways to prevention of violence against children in South Africa
Abstract
Background: Parenting programs based on social learning theory have increasing empirical evidence for reducing violence against children. Trials are primarily from high-income countries and with young children. Globally, we know little about how parenting programs work to reduce violence, with no known studies in low or middle-income countries (LMICs). This study examines mechanisms of change of a non-commercialized parenting program, Parenting for Lifelong Health for Teens, designed with the World Health Organization and UNICEF. A cluster randomized trial showed main effects on parenting and other secondary outcomes. We conducted secondary analysis of trial data to investigate five potential mediators of reduced violence against children: improved parenting, adolescent behaviour, caregiver mental health, alcohol/drug avoidance, and family economic strengthening.
Methods: The trial was implemented in rural South Africa with 40 sites, n = 552 family dyads (including adolescents aged 10-18 and primary caregivers). Intervention sites (n = 20) received the 14-session parenting program delivered by local community members, including modules on family budgeting and savings. Control sites (n = 20) received a brief informational workshop. Emotional and physical violence against children/adolescents and each potential mediator were reported by adolescents and caregivers at baseline and 9-13 months post-randomisation. Structural equation modelling was used to test simultaneous hypothesized pathways to violence reduction.
Results: Improvements in four pathways mediated reduced violence against children: 1) improved parenting practices, 2) improved caregiver mental health (reduced depression), 3) increased caregiver alcohol/drug avoidance and 4) improved family economic welfare. Improved child behaviour was not a mediator, although it was associated with less violence.
Conclusions: Simultaneously bolstering a set of family processes can reduce violence. Supporting self-care and positive coping for caregivers may be essential in challenging contexts. In countries with minimal or no economic safety nets, linking social learning parenting programs with economic strengthening skills may bring us closer to ending violence against children.
Keywords: Adolescence; Alcohol; Depression; Parenting; Poverty; Violence.
Copyright © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of conflicting interests
Conflict is avoided by declaring this potential conflict of interests; and by conducting and disseminating rigorous, transparent and impartial evaluation research on both this and other similar parenting programs.
Figures
References
-
- Achenbach T, 2000. Child behaviour checklists (CBCL/2–3 and CBCL/4–18), teacher report form (TRF) and youth self-report (YSR). In: The American Psychiatric Association Taskforce for the Handbook of Psychiatric Measures The Handbook of Psychiatric Measures: The American Psychiatric Association.
-
- Annan J, Bunderviet T, Seban J, Costigan J, 2013. Urwaruka Rushasha: A Randomised Impact Evaluation of Village Savings and Loans Associations and Family-Based Interventions in Burundi. Retrieved from Washington, DC. https://resourcecentre.savethechildren.net/sites/default/files/documents....
-
- Barlow J, Johnston I, Kendrick D, Polnay L, Stewart-Brown S, 2006. Individual and group-based parenting programmes for the treatment of physical child abuse and neglect. Cochrane Database Syst. Rev. 3, 1–20 (Art. No: CD005463). - PubMed
-
- Brown T, 2015. Confirmatory Factor Analysis for Applied Research. Guilford Publications.
