3.8 Article

Effect of Baby Triple P or Positive Parenting Program on Mental Health and Mother-child Relationship in Mothers of Hearing-impaired Children

Journal

ARCHIVES OF REHABILITATION
Volume 22, Issue 2, Pages 210-227

Publisher

NEGAH SCIENTIFIC PUBLISHER
DOI: 10.32598/RJ.22.2.3258.1

Keywords

Baby triple P; Hearing loss; Parent-child relationship; Mental Health

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Funding

  1. Department of Psychology and Education of Exceptional Children, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences, Tehran

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Interventions to promote parent-child relationship and maternal mental health are crucial for mothers of children with hearing impairment. The Baby Triple P positive parenting program showed no significant impact on maternal mental health but increased the overprotection component in the mother-child relationship. More research is needed to tailor interventions for the unique needs of children with hearing loss and their mothers.
Objective Hearing loss in children can affect the parent-child relationship and the mental health of parents, especially mothers as the children's primary caregivers. Maternal mental health problems and challenges in the parent-child relationship can affect the rehabilitation process and the future of hearing-impaired children. Thus, the interventions to promote the parent-child relationship and mental health of parents, especially mothers, should be studied. Triple P or positive parenting program is one of these effective interventional programs. Recently, a new intervention called the Baby Triple P parenting program was developed based on the Triple P program. This study investigates the effect of the Baby Triple P positive parenting program on mental health and mother-child relationship in mothers of children with hearing impairment. Materials & Methods This research is a quasi-experimental study with a pretest-posttest design using a control group. The participants were 24 mothers under 3 years old children with hearing impairment referred to the centers for families and children with hearing disabilities in Tehran, Iran, in 2019. They were selected using a convenience sampling method and then randomly divided into groups of intervention (n=12) and control (n=12). The intervention group received the Baby Triple P positive parenting program for 13 training 1-h sessions, one session per week. The control group did not receive any intervention. Both groups completed the mother-child relationship evaluation questionnaire and the symptom checklist-90-revised instrument before and after the intervention. The collected data were analyzed by the Mann-Whitney U test and independent sample t-test. Results There was no significant difference between the two groups regarding mental health after the intervention (P>0.05). Among four components of the mother-child relationship, the Baby Triple P program had no significant effect on acceptance, overindulgence, and rejection (P>0.05), except on the overprotection component (P<0.05), which was significantly higher in the intervention group. Conclusion There is a great need for early interventions for maternal mental health problems and challenges in mother-child relationships for mothers of children with hearing impairment. Although the Baby Triple P is a useful program, it is new for the parents of these children. Considering the unique needs of these children, more studies are needed to enrich the content of this program for the mothers of children with hearing loss to explore its various aspects.

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