The Development and Feasibility of a Manualised Therapeutic Playgroup for Children with Developmental Delay

Playgroups are widely used throughout the Australian community yet understanding of their efficacy is hindered by inconsistent playgroup definitions and practice principles. This study aimed to develop, implement and evaluate the feasibility of a manualised therapeutic playgroup for children with de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of child and family studies 2021, Vol.30 (1), p.1-16
Hauptverfasser: Armstrong, Jodie, Pieterse, Bridget, Elliott, Catherine, Wray, John, Davidson, Emma, Mizen, Joanne, Girdler, Sonya
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container_end_page 16
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
container_title Journal of child and family studies
container_volume 30
creator Armstrong, Jodie
Pieterse, Bridget
Elliott, Catherine
Wray, John
Davidson, Emma
Mizen, Joanne
Girdler, Sonya
description Playgroups are widely used throughout the Australian community yet understanding of their efficacy is hindered by inconsistent playgroup definitions and practice principles. This study aimed to develop, implement and evaluate the feasibility of a manualised therapeutic playgroup for children with developmental delay and their families using a three step process. Step one, manual development, involved triangulating findings from playgroup literature and utilising a working group of professionals ( n  = 10) and caregivers ( n  = 2) to identify practice principles and inform the content of a manualised playgroup. Step two, conducted a feasibility study involving parents ( n  = 9) and children ( n  = 8); with findings informing step three, manual revisions, in preparation for larger-scale efficacy testing. Step one resulted in the development of an 8-week manualised playgroup for children with developmental delay. In step two, playgroup participants demonstrated improvements in family support and child performance, with playgroup reported as being beneficial by both parents and facilitators. This perceived benefit was attributed to parents’ shared experience, access to skilled facilitators, parent learning and child enjoyment. In step three these findings were incorporated, finalising the manual. In a context where playgroup research is limited by model variability and poorly defined practice principles, this is the first study to systematically develop, implement and pilot a manualised therapeutic playgroup intervention for children with developmental delay. It provides an evidence-based definition of playgroup principles, delivers sufficient assurance of playgroup feasibility to warrant a larger definitive trial, and outlines a process for developing and testing the feasibility of a manualised, complex intervention. Highlights Demonstrates the process of manualising and testing the feasibility of a complex intervention. Therapeutic playgroups warrant larger, more rigourous study through randomised control trials.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s10826-020-01789-z
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subjects Analysis
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Caregivers
Child and School Psychology
Child development
Developmental Delays
Developmentally delayed children
Disabled children
Education
Efficacy
Family
Family Involvement
Family support
Feasibility
Feasibility studies
Health aspects
Home and school
Intervention
Original Paper
Parent participation
Parents
Parents & parenting
Playgroups
Psychology
Social Sciences
Sociology
title The Development and Feasibility of a Manualised Therapeutic Playgroup for Children with Developmental Delay
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