Background: Parenting programs aim to reduce children's conduct problems through improvement of family dynamics. To date, research on the precise benefits and possible harms of parenting programs on family well-being has been unsystematic and likely to be subject to selective outcome reporting and publication bias. Better understanding of program benefits and harms requires full disclosure by researchers of all included measures, and large enough numbers of participants to be able to detect small effects and estimate them precisely. Methods: We obtained individual participant data for 14 of 15 randomized controlled trials on the Incredible Years parenting program in Europe (total N = 1,799). We used multilevel modeling to estimate program e...
Children vary in the extent to which they benefit from parenting programs for conduct problems. How ...
An analysis of previous reviews of the parent education literature revealed that few reviewers have ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from BioMed Central via the DOI in this record.B...
Background: Parenting programs aim to reduce children’s conduct problems through improvement of fami...
Background Parenting programs aim to reduce children's conduct problems through improvement of famil...
Parenting programs aim to reduce children's conduct problems through improvement of family dynamics....
Objective: There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems m...
Acknowledgements For part of the preparation period for this article, AM was supported by an NHS Res...
Background: Interventions aimed at high-need families have difficulty demonstrating short-term impac...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Objective There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems me...
Objective There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems me...
BACKGROUND: Childhood conduct problems are a costly public health problem and are five times more co...
Background: Conduct problems are common, disabling and costly. The prognosis for children with condu...
BACKGROUND: Childhood conduct problems are a costly public health problem and are five times more co...
Children vary in the extent to which they benefit from parenting programs for conduct problems. How ...
An analysis of previous reviews of the parent education literature revealed that few reviewers have ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from BioMed Central via the DOI in this record.B...
Background: Parenting programs aim to reduce children’s conduct problems through improvement of fami...
Background Parenting programs aim to reduce children's conduct problems through improvement of famil...
Parenting programs aim to reduce children's conduct problems through improvement of family dynamics....
Objective: There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems m...
Acknowledgements For part of the preparation period for this article, AM was supported by an NHS Res...
Background: Interventions aimed at high-need families have difficulty demonstrating short-term impac...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Objective There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems me...
Objective There is concern whether established parenting programs for children’s conduct problems me...
BACKGROUND: Childhood conduct problems are a costly public health problem and are five times more co...
Background: Conduct problems are common, disabling and costly. The prognosis for children with condu...
BACKGROUND: Childhood conduct problems are a costly public health problem and are five times more co...
Children vary in the extent to which they benefit from parenting programs for conduct problems. How ...
An analysis of previous reviews of the parent education literature revealed that few reviewers have ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from BioMed Central via the DOI in this record.B...