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Impact of a 6-Week Postpartum Text Messaging Program (Essential Coaching for Every Mother) at 6 Months: Follow-Up Study to a Randomized Controlled Trial

Impact of a 6-Week Postpartum Text Messaging Program (Essential Coaching for Every Mother) at 6 Months: Follow-Up Study to a Randomized Controlled Trial

The primary outcome was parenting self-efficacy measured using the Karitane Parenting Confidence Scale [14]. This 15-item scale assesses the perceived self-efficacy of mothers with newborns from birth to 12 months of age. Scores can range between 0 and 45 and a score of 39 or less is considered to be clinically low perceived parenting self-efficacy [14].

Justine Dol, Marsha Campbell-Yeo, Megan Aston, Douglas McMillan, Amy K Grant

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e62841

Optimizing Engagement With a Smartphone App to Prevent Violence Against Adolescents: Results From a Cluster Randomized Factorial Trial in Tanzania

Optimizing Engagement With a Smartphone App to Prevent Violence Against Adolescents: Results From a Cluster Randomized Factorial Trial in Tanzania

Consequently, poor engagement severely limits the potential public health impact of digital parenting interventions [35,36]. Understanding and optimizing engagement in LMIC contexts is thus critical for establishing digital parenting interventions as a scalable violence prevention strategy. Existing studies examining engagement with digital parenting interventions in HICs have largely been descriptive [37,38] or focus on sociodemographic and behavioral characteristics associated with engagement [39-42].

Roselinde Janowski, Lucie D Cluver, Yulia Shenderovich, Joyce Wamoyi, Mwita Wambura, David Stern, Lily Clements, G J Melendez-Torres, Lauren Baerecke, Abigail Ornellas, Angelique Nicole Chetty, Jonathan Klapwijk, Laetitia Christine, Ateamate Mukabana, Esmee Te Winkel, Anna Booij, Gervas Mbosoli, Jamie M Lachman

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e60102

A Primary Care Group Resilience Intervention Promotes Child and Caregiver Behavioral Health

A Primary Care Group Resilience Intervention Promotes Child and Caregiver Behavioral Health

Initially serving children of all ages, this program was redesigned based on significant parent feedback to focus on early childhood (ages 0‐5); the curriculum incorporates Circle of Security-Parenting (building secure attachment) [5] and Dovetail Learning (mindful stress management) [6] in 6 weekly, hour-long group sessions. This study explored whether participation in RC decreased measures of (1) caregiver stress, anxiety, and depression, and (2) child behavioral challenges.

Joan Jeung, Andrew Nguyen, Jennifer Martinez, Li Zhang

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2025;8:e67638

A Digital Parenting Intervention With Intimate Partner Violence Prevention Content: Quantitative Pre-Post Pilot Study

A Digital Parenting Intervention With Intimate Partner Violence Prevention Content: Quantitative Pre-Post Pilot Study

Alongside gender-transformative interventions, in the field of VAC, parenting programs have been identified as a major strategy for reducing and preventing violence [21]. Findings from a recent systematic review of parenting programs for reducing child maltreatment in low- and middle-income countries identified several promising results across child, parent, and family outcomes, with meta-analyses results revealing reductions in child maltreatment and harsh parenting [22].

Moa Schafer, Jamie Lachman, Paula Zinser, Francisco Antonio Calderón Alfaro, Qing Han, Chiara Facciola, Lily Clements, Frances Gardner, Genevieve Haupt Ronnie, Ross Sheil

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e58611

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

Parental Information-Use Strategies in a Digital Parenting Environment and Their Associations With Parental Social Support and Self-Efficacy: Cross-Sectional Study

In the current digital age, the proliferation of applications designed to make pregnancy and parenting more convenient is changing the landscape of parenting [1,2]. The space for sharing parenting information and support has expanded from offline to online, becoming a normalized aspect of daily life [3]. The expansion of the online information space has provided many benefits for parents.

Ryuta Onishi

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e58757

Remotely Delivered Video Interaction Guidance for Families of Children With an Intellectual Disability Referred to Specialist Mental Health Services: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial

Remotely Delivered Video Interaction Guidance for Families of Children With an Intellectual Disability Referred to Specialist Mental Health Services: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial

Parenting and the quality of the parent-child relationship are risk factors for challenging behaviors and mental health problems in these families [10-13]. Children with IDs are at higher risk of experiencing negative parenting and poorer parent-child relationships [12].

Charmaine Kohn, Lauren Turner, Zhixing Yang, Michael Absoud, Angela Casbard, Manuel Gomes, Gemma Grant, Angela Hassiotis, Eilis Kennedy, Sophie Levitt, Rachel McNamara, Elizabeth Randell, Vasiliki Totsika

JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e54619

Indigenous Parents’ Perspectives of Factors That Facilitate or Impede Engagement in Internet-Based Parenting Support Programs: Interpretive Description Study

Indigenous Parents’ Perspectives of Factors That Facilitate or Impede Engagement in Internet-Based Parenting Support Programs: Interpretive Description Study

Parenting programs are especially important for parents of young children (aged Parenting programs typically target specific populations, such as parents of children aged Parenting programs in Ontario, Canada, include the generic and Indigenous-specific Healthy Babies Healthy Children, Head Start, and Early ON programs, which offer education and activities by licensed early childhood educators to promote healthy parenting and early childhood development [7-10].

Michelle L Butt, Ysabella Jayne Willett, Vicky Miller, Brenda Jacobs, Era Mae Ferron, Amy L Wright

JMIR Pediatr Parent 2024;7:e64994

Embedding Technology-Assisted Parenting Interventions in Real-World Settings to Empower Parents of Children With Adverse Childhood Experiences: Co-Design Study

Embedding Technology-Assisted Parenting Interventions in Real-World Settings to Empower Parents of Children With Adverse Childhood Experiences: Co-Design Study

Unlike many community- or society-level ACEs, maladaptive parenting is an ACE that is potentially within a parent’s capacity to modify. Evidence-based parenting interventions designed to intervene with maladaptive parenting hold clear potential for preventing or reducing the impact of such ACEs and protecting young people from the risk of mental disorders.

Grace Aldridge, Ling Wu, Joshua Paolo Seguin, Jennifer Robinson, Elizabeth Battaglia, Patrick Olivier, Marie B H Yap

JMIR Form Res 2024;8:e55639