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Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention

Agata M. Urbanowicz Orcid Logo, Rebecca Shankland Orcid Logo, Jaynie Rance Orcid Logo, Paul Bennett, Aurélie Gauchet

The Family Journal

Swansea University Authors: Jaynie Rance Orcid Logo, Paul Bennett

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Abstract

Positive psychology interventions aim to enhance individuals’ resilience, mental health, and well-being. This study ( N = 34) aimed to assess whether the CARE (Coherence, Attention, Relationship, Engagement) intervention tailored to enhance parental strengths and resources may contribute to the prev...

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Published in: The Family Journal
ISSN: 1066-4807 1552-3950
Published: SAGE Publications 2024
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa68137
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first_indexed 2024-11-01T11:36:20Z
last_indexed 2024-11-01T11:36:20Z
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spelling v2 68137 2024-11-01 Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention 14360f4993b452995fbc22db857cabf7 0000-0002-9504-0675 Jaynie Rance Jaynie Rance true false 20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3 Paul Bennett Paul Bennett true false 2024-11-01 PSYS Positive psychology interventions aim to enhance individuals’ resilience, mental health, and well-being. This study ( N = 34) aimed to assess whether the CARE (Coherence, Attention, Relationship, Engagement) intervention tailored to enhance parental strengths and resources may contribute to the prevention and reduction of parental burnout. We tested the hypothesis that, compared to a waiting-list control group, parents attending the intervention would present lower scores of parental burnout postintervention (T2). The results of the study showed that compared to the control group the CARE program contributed to the significant reduction of parental burnout within the intervention group, with a large effect size ( F(1, 32) = 7.74 , p = .01, η2p = 0.20). Within the CARE group, the severity of parental burnout significantly decreased ( t(32) = 3.87, Mdiff = 16.71, SEdiff = 4.32, p = .01), whereas there was no statistically significant difference in parental burnout symptoms between T1 and T2 among the participants from the control group ( t(32) = −0.07, Mdiff = −0.29, SEdiff = 4.32, p = 1.00). In conclusion, the findings of the present study suggest that the CARE intervention may significantly contribute to the reduction of parental burnout. Journal Article The Family Journal 0 SAGE Publications 1066-4807 1552-3950 Parental burnout, positive psychology, prevention, clinical trial 23 10 2024 2024-10-23 10.1177/10664807241286809 COLLEGE NANME Psychology School COLLEGE CODE PSYS Swansea University Not Required The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This work was supported by the Université Grenoble Alpes. 2024-11-01T11:36:21.2747775 2024-11-01T11:22:01.6723558 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Agata M. Urbanowicz 0000-0003-2646-7111 1 Rebecca Shankland 0000-0002-9182-5483 2 Jaynie Rance 0000-0002-9504-0675 3 Paul Bennett 4 Aurélie Gauchet 5
title Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
spellingShingle Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
Jaynie Rance
Paul Bennett
title_short Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
title_full Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
title_fullStr Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
title_full_unstemmed Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
title_sort Second Wave Positive Psychology in the Prevention and Reduction of Parental Burnout: The CARE Intervention
author_id_str_mv 14360f4993b452995fbc22db857cabf7
20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3
author_id_fullname_str_mv 14360f4993b452995fbc22db857cabf7_***_Jaynie Rance
20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3_***_Paul Bennett
author Jaynie Rance
Paul Bennett
author2 Agata M. Urbanowicz
Rebecca Shankland
Jaynie Rance
Paul Bennett
Aurélie Gauchet
format Journal article
container_title The Family Journal
container_volume 0
publishDate 2024
institution Swansea University
issn 1066-4807
1552-3950
doi_str_mv 10.1177/10664807241286809
publisher SAGE Publications
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 0
active_str 0
description Positive psychology interventions aim to enhance individuals’ resilience, mental health, and well-being. This study ( N = 34) aimed to assess whether the CARE (Coherence, Attention, Relationship, Engagement) intervention tailored to enhance parental strengths and resources may contribute to the prevention and reduction of parental burnout. We tested the hypothesis that, compared to a waiting-list control group, parents attending the intervention would present lower scores of parental burnout postintervention (T2). The results of the study showed that compared to the control group the CARE program contributed to the significant reduction of parental burnout within the intervention group, with a large effect size ( F(1, 32) = 7.74 , p = .01, η2p = 0.20). Within the CARE group, the severity of parental burnout significantly decreased ( t(32) = 3.87, Mdiff = 16.71, SEdiff = 4.32, p = .01), whereas there was no statistically significant difference in parental burnout symptoms between T1 and T2 among the participants from the control group ( t(32) = −0.07, Mdiff = −0.29, SEdiff = 4.32, p = 1.00). In conclusion, the findings of the present study suggest that the CARE intervention may significantly contribute to the reduction of parental burnout.
published_date 2024-10-23T11:36:20Z
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