Effectiveness and moderators of the preventive intervention kids in divorce situations: A randomized controlled trial
Publication date
2015-10-01
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Children of divorced parents have an increased risk of a variety of problems in comparison to children from intact families. Therefore, several intervention programs have been developed directed at children of divorced parents. Yet, empirical data on the effectiveness of these interventions are limited. This study evaluated the school-based, child-directed prevention program Kids In Divorce Situations (KIDS) using a randomized controlled trial. The sample consisted of 156 children randomly assigned at the school level into an experimental (80 children) and control condition (76 children). In addition, 131 mothers and 76 fathers participated in the study. Four assessments took place: a pretest, a posttest, and two follow-up assessments conducted 6 months and 1 year after finishing KIDS. Latent growth analyses demonstrated that the intervention significantly reduced child-reported emotional problems and enhanced child-reported communication with the father and mother-reported communication with the child. The effect sizes ranged from.30-.63. Few moderation effects of gender, time since divorce, or perceived parental conflict on the intervention effects were found. After parental divorce, a limited school-based intervention for children can be efficacious in promoting children's emotional well-being and parent-child communication.
Keywords
Child-focused, Effectiveness, Moderation, Parental divorce, Preventive intervention, Taverne, General Psychology
Citation
Pelleboer-Gunnink, H A, Van der Valk, I E, Branje, S J T, Van Doorn, M D & Dekovic, M 2015, 'Effectiveness and moderators of the preventive intervention kids in divorce situations : A randomized controlled trial', Journal of Family Psychology, vol. 29, no. 5, pp. 799-805. https://doi.org/10.1037/fam0000107