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. 2024;24(1):39-65.
doi: 10.1080/15295192.2023.2286454. Epub 2024 Jan 2.

Observations of Positive Parenting from Online Parent-Child Interactions at Age 1

Affiliations

Observations of Positive Parenting from Online Parent-Child Interactions at Age 1

Rebecca Waller et al. Parent Sci Pract. 2024.

Abstract

Objective: Brief, reliable, and cost-effective methods to assess parenting are critical for advancing parenting research.

Design: We adapted the Three Bags task and Parent Child Interaction Rating System (PCIRS) for rating online visits with 219 parent-child dyads (White, n = 104 [47.5%], Black, n = 115 [52.5%]) and combined the video data with survey data collected during pregnancy and when children were aged 1.

Results: The PCIRS codes of positive regard, stimulation of child cognitive development, and sensitivity showed high reliability across the three parent-child interaction tasks. A latent positive parenting factor combining ratings across codes and tasks showed good model fit, which was similar regardless of parent self-identified race or ethnicity, age, socioeconomic disadvantage, marital/partnered status, and parity, as well as methodological factors relevant to the online video assessment method (e.g., phone vs. laptop/tablet). In support of construct validity, observed positive parenting was related to parent-reported positive parenting and child socioemotional development. Finally, parent reports of supportive relationships in pregnancy, but not neighborhood safety or pandemic worries, were prospectively related to higher positive parenting observed at age 1. With the exception of older parental age and married/partnered status, no other parent, child, sociodemographic, or methodological variables were related to higher overall video exclusions across tasks.

Conclusions: PCIRS may provide a reliable approach to rate positive parenting at age 1, providing future avenues for developing more ecologically valid assessments and implementing interventions through online encounters that may be more acceptable, accessible, or preferred among parents of young children.

Keywords: childhood; infancy; interactions; observational coding; parenting.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures Each author signed a form for disclosure of potential conflicts of interest. R. Barzilay serves on the scientific board and reports stock ownership in Taliaz Health, with no conflict of interest relevant to this work. J. Seidlitz reports stock ownership in Centile Bioscience, with no conflict of interest relevant to this work. No other authors reported any financial or other conflicts of interest in relation to the work described.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Observed positive parenting at age 1 year relates to concurrent parent-reported positive parenting, concurrent child socioemotional development, and prospectively assessed supportive close relationships in pregnancy. Note. Partial regression plots are shown with 95% confidence intervals (see Tables 2 and 3).

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