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Investigating the impact of a parenting intervention within a rural South African community: a longitudinal social network analysis

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  • معلومة اضافية
    • Contributors:
      Ward, Catherine L; Hewstone, Miles C; Wölfer, Ralf
    • بيانات النشر:
      Faculty of Humanities
      Department of Psychology
    • الموضوع:
      2021
    • Collection:
      University of Cape Town: OpenUCT
    • نبذة مختصرة :
      Colder, harsher parenting attitudes and behaviours negatively impact children's behaviour and development, and have been linked to heightened levels of violence towards children. Parenting interventions can improve outcomes by reducing violent and increasing non-violent parenting behaviours. I investigated how changes associated with a low-cost positive parenting intervention spread through a rural, low-income, South African community. Specifically, I assessed whether exposure to a community-wide social activation process and Parenting for Lifelong Health (PLH) programmes (focused on violence prevention in low-resource settings) significantly predict: (1) improved parenting, and (2) change in the communication networks of female caregivers in the whole community, while controlling for variables such as psychiatric symptoms, parenting stress, and alcohol misuse. Additionally, I investigated whether ties to parenting programme attendees in the communication network predicted improved parenting. Afrikaans-speaking female caregivers (n = 235; mean age 35.92 years), with children aged between 1½ and 18 years old, participated in the intervention; three waves of data were collected (January 2016, June 2017, and February 2019). The social network was measured based on a peer nomination procedure (of study participants whom “you talk to about parenting”). To analyse the role of interpersonal ties as pathways for spreading intervention effects, I make use of Social Network Analysis (SNA), in the form of nominations of people with whom respondents discuss parenting, together with self-report measures of parenting-related outcomes (from caregivers and their children). I then trace the extent to which both the social activation process and the parenting programmes are effective, in part, via their diffusion throughout the community. SNA was used to disentangle whether network changes improved parenting practices (i.e., selection effects) or whether reported improvements in parenting practices improved caregiver information ...
    • File Description:
      application/pdf
    • Relation:
      http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33730; https://open.uct.ac.za/bitstream/11427/33730/1/thesis_hum_2021_kleyn%20lisa.pdf
    • الرقم المعرف:
      edsbas.BAF24B89