Integrated Behavioral Health Prevention for Infants in Pediatric Primary Care: A Mixed-Methods Pilot Study

Pediatric primary care is a promising setting in which to deliver preventive behavioral health services to young children and their families. Integrated behavioral health care models typically emphasize treatment rather than prevention. This pilot study examined the efficacy of an integrated behavio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric psychology 2024-04, Vol.49 (4), p.298-308
Hauptverfasser: Ammerman, Robert T, Rybak, Tiffany M, Herbst, Rachel B, Mara, Constance A, Zion, Cynthia, Patel, Meera A, Burstein, Emma, Lauer, Brea A, Fiat, Aria E, Jordan, Phoebe, Burkhardt, Mary Carol, McClure, Jessica M, Stark, Lori J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pediatric primary care is a promising setting in which to deliver preventive behavioral health services to young children and their families. Integrated behavioral health care models typically emphasize treatment rather than prevention. This pilot study examined the efficacy of an integrated behavioral health preventive (IBH-P) intervention delivered by psychologists and focused on supporting parenting in low-income mothers of infants as part of well-child visits in the first 6 months of life. Using a mixed-methods approach that included a pilot randomized clinical trial and post-intervention qualitative interviews, 137 mothers were randomly assigned to receive IBH-P or usual care. Self-report measures of parenting, child behavior, and stress were obtained at pre- and/or post-intervention. Direct observation of mother-infant interactions was conducted at post-intervention. No differences between groups were found on maternal attunement, knowledge of child development, nurturing parenting, or infant behavior. A secondary analysis on a subsample with no prior exposure to IBH-P with older siblings found that mothers in IBH-P reported increased self-efficacy relative to controls. In the qualitative interviews, mothers stated that they valued IBH-P, learning about their baby, liked the integration in primary care, and felt respected and comfortable with their provider. Findings are discussed in terms of the next steps in refining IBH-P approaches to prevention in primary care.
ISSN:0146-8693
1465-735X
DOI:10.1093/jpepsy/jsad098