Improvements in Unmarried African American Parents' Rapport, Communication, and Problem-Solving Following a Prenatal Coparenting Intervention

Family Process
James McHaleMichael D Coovert

Abstract

This report examines effects of a coparenting intervention designed for and delivered to expectant unmarried African American mothers and fathers on observed interaction dynamics known to predict relationship adjustment. Twenty families took part in the six-session "Figuring It Out for the Child" (FIOC) dyadic intervention offered in a faith-based human services agency during the third trimester of the mother's pregnancy, and completed a postpartum booster session 1 month after the baby's arrival. Parent referrals for the FIOC program were received from a county Health Department and from OBGYNs and Pregnancy Centers in the targeted community. All intervention sessions were delivered by a trained male-female paraprofessional team whose fidelity to the FIOC manualized curriculum was independently evaluated by a team of trained analysts. At both the point of intake ("PRE") and again at an exit evaluation completed 3 months postpartum ("POST"), the mothers and fathers were videotaped as they completed two standardized "revealed differences" conflict discussions. Blinded videotapes of these sessions were evaluated using the System for Coding Interactions in Dyads. Analyses documented statistically significant improvements on 8 of 1...Continue Reading

References

Sep 15, 2005·The Future of Children·Kathryn Edin, Joanna M Reed
Apr 21, 2010·Nursing Research·Susan M BreitensteinDeborah Gross
Jul 13, 2012·Journal of Marital and Family Therapy·Jesse OwenTiffany France

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Citations

Feb 17, 2015·Family Process·Jay FaganEric Vecere
Nov 17, 2017·Family Process·W Justin DyerNatasha Cabrera
Jul 20, 2019·Infant Mental Health Journal·Andre Dukes, Glen Palm
May 1, 2016·Prevention Science : the Official Journal of the Society for Prevention Research·Steven R H BeachGene H Brody

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