Journal Article

The Effectiveness of Group Triple P for Chinese Immigrant Parents of School Age Children Living in New Zealand

Published: 13 May 2022

Abstract
The study was a randomised controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of the Group Triple P Program for Chinese immigrant parents living in New Zealand. Sixty-seven Chinese immigrant parents of a 5- to 9-year-old child with disruptive behaviour problems were randomly allocated to either an intervention or a waitlist group. Parents completed measures of child adjustment problems, general parenting practices, parenting practices in children’s academic lives, parental adjustment, parental teamwork, and family relationships at pre-, post-, and 4-month follow-up. Intervention group ratings of programme satisfaction were collected following programme completion. Significant short-term intervention effects were found for improvements in child behaviour, parenting practices, parental teamwork, and parenting in the child academic context. All intervention effects, except for parental teamwork, were maintained at 4-month follow-up. There were no significant intervention effects for parental adjustment, however, medium effect sizes were found at post-intervention and follow-up. A high level of programme satisfaction was reported.

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Citation

Wei, Y., Keown, L.J., Franke, N., & Sanders, M.R. (2022). The effectiveness of Group Triple P for Chinese Immigrant parents of school age children living in New Zealand. Behaviour Change, 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1017/bec.2022.1