Long-term maintenance of treatment effects following intervention for families with children who have acquired brain injury
Abstract
Purpose
Where no psychosocial or interventional support is provided, children with acquired brain injury (ABI) are at significant risk of serious long-term behavioural and social difficulties. The purpose of this paper is to report the six- and 18-month long-term treatment effects of a family centred behavioural intervention to help families manage and prevent challenging behaviours in children following ABI.
Design/methodology/approach
In total, 31 parents were followed up at three time points (post-intervention, 6 and 18 months) after participating in an ABI adapted manualised “Signposts for Building Better Behaviour” programme (Hudson et al., 2003).
Findings
Attrition rates were highest amongst families caring for a child with mild ABI. The maintenance of treatment effects were detailed for those families who reported a reduction in challenging behaviour immediately post-intervention. There were no significant elevations in challenging child behaviour, maladaptive parenting, or family dysfunction for any participants over the long-term follow-up. Irrespective of injury severity, parents reported high levels of satisfaction and efficacy in the parenting role at 18 months post-intervention.
Originality/value
“Signposts” has further demonstrated its clinical viability by meeting the needs of parents who have a child with ABI in both the short- and longer-term.
Keywords
Citation
T. Woods, D., Catroppa, C., Godfrey, C. and A. Anderson, V. (2014), "Long-term maintenance of treatment effects following intervention for families with children who have acquired brain injury", Social Care and Neurodisability, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 70-82. https://doi.org/10.1108/SCN-01-2014-0001
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited