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  4. 2020
Showing papers in "Behaviour Change in 2020"
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.7•
Relations between Emotional Expressivity Dimensions and DSM-5 Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Clusters in a Trauma-Exposed Community Sample

[...]

Ling Jin1, Megan Dolan1, Ateka A. Contractor1, Nicole H. Weiss2, Paula Dranger3 •
University of North Texas1, University of Rhode Island2, Valparaiso University3
11 Jun 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: Findings highlight the role of emotional expressivity, specifically impulse strength, in PTSD's symptomatology and may inform guidelines for emotion-focused clinical work for trauma-exposed individuals with PTSD symptoms.
Abstract: Background and Objective. A growing body of literature indicates a significant contribution and role of positive and negative emotions (specifically expressivity) in post-traumatic stress disorder's (PTSD) symptomatology. The current study examined the facet-level relationships between emotional expressivity and PTSD. Specifically, we investigated which emotional expressivity dimension (impulse strength, negative emotional expressivity, and positive emotional expressivity) most strongly related to DSM-5 PTSD symptom clusters severity (intrusions, avoidance, negative alterations in cognition and mood, and alterations in arousal and reactivity). Methods. The sample of 123 trauma-exposed participants seeking mental health treatment completed the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) and the Berkeley Expressivity Questionnaire (BEQ). Results. Results of multivariate multiple regression analysis indicated that only intensity of emotion and difficulty in controlling such emotions (i.e., impulse strength) was strongly related to all four PTSD symptom clusters. The valence of emotional expressivity (positive or negative) was not related to any of the PTSD symptom clusters. Conclusions. Study findings highlight the role of emotional expressivity, specifically impulse strength, in PTSD's symptomatology and may inform guidelines for emotion-focused clinical work for trauma-exposed individuals with PTSD symptoms.

14 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.5•
Male Figural Rating Scales: A Critical Review of the Literature

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Daniel Talbot1, John Cass2, Evelyn Smith2•
University of Notre Dame1, University of Sydney2
01 Jun 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this paper, a review aimed at examining the design and psychometric properties of male figural rating scales and make recommendations based on the findings of the review, the authors identified five different scales that meet the majority of the recommended criteria, including strong validity and reliability, variations in both body fat and muscularity, utilising realistic body stimuli, and interval scales.
Abstract: Figural rating scales are tools used to measure male body dissatisfaction. The present review aimed to examine the design and psychometric properties of male figural rating scales and make recommendations based on findings. Relevant databases were systematically searched for studies that had developed and validated male figural rating scales. Twenty studies were included in this review. Figural rating scales differed in terms of the number of images represented and type of stimuli used (hand-drawn silhouettes, hand-drawn figures, computer-rendered figures, and photograph figures). Reliability and validity evidence varied greatly in strength across all scales. Four of the 20 scales included a correlational analysis between figural rating scale scores and eating disorder symptoms. Results showed the moderate to high positive correlations between eating disorder symptoms and figural rating scale perceived and index scores, suggesting that figural rating scales are sensitive to detecting eating disorder symptoms. Ideally, male figural rating scales should show strong validity and reliability, include variations in both body fat and muscularity, utilise realistic body stimuli, and be interval scales. No existing male figural rating scale meets these criteria. However, this review identifies five figural rating scales that meet the majority of the recommended criteria.

10 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.3•
Does ACT-Group Training Improve Cognitive Domain in Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder? A Single-Arm, Open-Label Study

[...]

Laura Vanzin, Alessandro Crippa, Valentina Mauri, Angela Valli, Maddalena Mauri, Massimo Molteni, Maria Nobile 
01 Apr 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: It is suggested that the 9-month ACT-group training programme might not have positive effects on cognitive difficulties usually occurring in ADHD, and future randomised controlled trials with larger sample sizes are required to shed more light on this issue.
Abstract: This single-arm, open-label study aimed to investigate the efficacy of a cognitive-behavioural group training based on acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) on cognition in drug-naive children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Thirty-six children with ADHD aged 8–13 were invited to participate in the 9-month ACT training programme, which consisted of 26 weekly sessions of group therapy lasting 90 min each. Their parents also received 12 sessions of ACT-based parent training, every 2 weeks. The outcome measure for the present study was the change in the cognitive performance assessed by a battery of computerised task. The cognitive outcome of children receiving ACT-group intervention was compared to that of an external untreated control group of children with ADHD. No significant improvements were observed in any of the cognitive measures. This preliminary study suggests that the 9-month ACT-group training programme might not have positive effects on cognitive difficulties usually occurring in ADHD. Future randomised controlled trials with larger sample sizes are required to shed more light on this issue.

9 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.13•
What Influences Parenting Behaviour? The Role of Parent Self-Concept

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Catherine B. Gittins1, Maree J. Abbott1, Caroline Hunt1•
University of Sydney1
01 Jan 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the relation between parent self-cognitions and parenting behaviours and found that self-concept has a large influence on parenting behaviours, and that psychologically controlling behaviour in parents may be due to poor self-worth.
Abstract: Parenting has a strong influence on child development. However, there is minimal empirical evidence on why some parents use beneficial techniques, while others use harmful behaviours. Thus, there is a significant gap in the knowledge needed to address problematic parenting. Theories suggest that parental self-concept has a large influence on parenting behaviours. The aim of this study was to examine the relation between parent self-cognitions and parenting behaviours. One-hundred and four mothers of Grade 7 students completed questionnaires measuring their self-esteem, self-criticism, domain-specific self-concept, and parenting behaviours (support, behavioural control, and psychological control). Regression analyses demonstrated that self-cognitions largely predicted psychological control but support or behavioural control did not. These findings suggest that psychologically controlling behaviour in parents may be due to poor self-worth. With psychological control known to deeply damage children, these findings have major implications for interventions targeting harmful parenting.

9 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.6•
The Explanation of Eating Disorders: A Critical Analysis

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Hannah Hawkins-Elder, Tony Ward
01 Jun 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: This article reviewed and evaluated several prominent theoretical explanations associated with current frontline and promising treatments for eating disorders and identified fundamental problems within the construction of current ED explanations and their implications for treatment, and proposed several strategies for constructing future ED explanations which they believe have the power to ameliorate these problems and potentially help to develop more efficacious treatment downstream.
Abstract: Eating disorders (EDs) are one of the most severe and complex mental health problems facing researchers and clinicians today. The effective prevention and treatment of these conditions is therefore of paramount importance. However, at present our treatments fall short: generally demonstrating only poor to moderate efficacy, and often completely ineffective for severe or chronic cases. A possible reason for this is that the current theories underlying these treatments are flawed. In this paper, we review and evaluate several prominent theoretical explanations associated with current frontline and promising treatments for ED. In doing so, we identify fundamental problems within the construction of current ED explanations and their implications for treatment. In response to these findings, we propose several strategies for the construction of future ED explanations which we believe have the power to ameliorate these problems and potentially help to develop more efficacious treatment downstream.

7 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.14•
Treatment for Younger Siblings of Participants in a Home-Based Intensive Paediatric Feeding Programme in Australia

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Tessa Taylor, Alayna Haberlin1•
University of New England (United States)1
26 Nov 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: This multi-component intervention was effective in increasing the consumption of a wide variety of foods at regular texture and self-feeding for both participants and trained caregivers to high procedural integrity and generalised the protocol.
Abstract: Early childhood feeding problems can be challenging. Children who limit their food consumption may significantly impact multiple critical areas of development. Effective treatment should be accessed as early as possible but has been limited to a handful of US hospital programmes. Feeding problems affect both children with and without disability, and families may struggle with multiple children having feeding difficulties. We provided short-term (less than 2 weeks), in-home, intensive, behaviour-analytic feeding intervention to two children with typical development who were younger siblings of children already in the programme. We used a withdrawal/reversal design to assess the effects of nonremoval of the spoon, re-presentation, contingent and noncontingent access to tangibles, differential attention, and response cost. This multi-component intervention was effective in increasing the consumption of a wide variety of foods at regular texture and self-feeding for both participants. Variety was increased to over 60 foods from all food groups. Admission goals were met (100%). We trained caregivers to high procedural integrity and generalised the protocol. We provided actual plate picture examples of family meals consumed where the brothers and parents ate the same meal. Caregiver satisfaction and social acceptability were high. Gains were maintained at 3-year follow-up where parents reported problems were fully resolved.

6 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.2•
A Systematic Review of the Psychometric Properties of Multidimensional Trait Perfectionism Self-Report Measures

[...]

Alice Lo1, Caroline Hunt1, Maree J. Abbott1•
University of Sydney1
01 Jun 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review examined the literature for the psychometric properties of the most commonly used general multidimensional trait perfectionism self-report measures, with a total of 349 studies identified, with 38 of these meeting inclusion criteria.
Abstract: Different and evolving conceptualisations of perfectionism have led to the development of numerous perfectionism measures in an attempt to capture the true representations of the construct. It is, therefore, important to ensure that these instruments are valid and reliable. The present systematic review examined the literature for the psychometric properties of the most commonly used general multidimensional trait perfectionism self-report measures. Relevant studies were identified by a systematic electronic search of academic databases. A total of 349 studies were identified, with 38 of these meeting inclusion criteria. The psychometric properties presented in each of these studies were subjected to assessment using a standardised protocol. All studies were evaluated by two reviewers independently. Results indicated that while none of the included measures demonstrated adequacy across all of the nine psychometric properties assessed, most were found to possess adequate internal consistency and construct validity. The absence of evidence to support adequate measurement properties over a number of domains for the measures included in this review may be attributed to the criteria of adequacy used, with some appearing overly strict and less relevant to perfectionism measures. Clinical and research relevance of the present findings and directions for future research are discussed.

5 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2019.17•
Outcome of CBT for Problematic Hoarding in a Naturalistic Setting: Impact on Symptoms and Distress Tolerance

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Karen Rowa, Duncan H. Cameron, Noam Soreni, Joelle LeMoult1, Randi E. McCabe •
University of British Columbia1
01 Apr 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: The results suggest that 12 sessions of group CBT for hoarding is associated with significant change in saving cognitions, but less meaningful change in other indicators of symptom severity.
Abstract: Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) for problematic hoarding is an effective treatment, but further research in diverse, naturalistic settings is needed to see whether this treatment is effective across settings and in smaller doses. The current study investigated the outcome of a 12-session group CBT for hoarding offered in an outpatient hospital setting. Sixty-four participants completed therapy, and 38 participants completed posttreatment assessments. Results demonstrated statistically significant improvements in hoarding symptom severity, saving cognitions, and self-reported distress tolerance. Effect sizes for changes in saving cognitions were generally large. However, effect sizes were modest for most other outcome variables, and only 4 of 38 participants achieved clinically significant change in hoarding symptom severity. These results suggest that 12 sessions of group CBT for hoarding is associated with significant change in saving cognitions, but less meaningful change in other indicators of symptom severity.

3 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.4•
Treatment Integrity and Social Validity of the FRIENDS for Life Programme in a Northeastern Canadian School System

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Susan Doyle1, Sarah E. Francis1, Rhonda Joy2•
University of Toledo1, Memorial University of Newfoundland2
01 Jun 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: The FRIENDS for Life (FFL) program, a school-based anxiety prevention program, targets anxiety reduction and resiliency development in elementary school-aged children.
Abstract: The FRIENDS for Life (FFL) programme, a school-based anxiety prevention programme, targets anxiety reduction and resiliency development in elementary school-aged children (Barrett, Sonderegger & Xenos, 2003). In the context of equivocal effectiveness findings regarding FFL in Canadian schools, the present study assessed pre–post changes in anxiety, self-esteem, and prosocial behaviour in a school system in Northeastern Canada. To yield further insight to the potential sources of equivocal FFL effectiveness findings, we also evaluated FFL treatment integrity (TI) and social validity (SV). Few studies have assessed FFL TI at the level of identifying which programme sessions, or within-session content, have or have not been adhered to (Higgins & O'Sullivan S, 2015). Similarly, few studies have provided detailed programme SV data or perceived programme benefits by children and parents. TI and SV can provide programme data beyond anxiety reduction, which is key in prevention programming research, as pre–post changes are challenging to detect in ‘healthy’ samples (Durlak & Wells, 1997). Treatment outcome, TI, and SV data were collected from classrooms across 10 elementary schools administering FFL. The sample included 210 child and 108 parent participants; post-testing occurred 1 week following FFL programme completion. Findings indicated significant decreases from pre- to post-test in child-reported anxiety and self-esteem but no changes in prosocial behaviours. Findings suggest that low TI ratings may have impacted anxiety, self-esteem, and prosocial behaviour results, and that child-reported SV may be more related to programme outcomes than parent-reported SV. Implications for FFL programme developers and future FFL evaluation studies are discussed.

3 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.8•
The Impact of Socio-environmental Barriers on the Process of Engagement in Cardiac Rehabilitation Programs

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Sepideh Jahandideh1, Elizabeth Kendall1, Samantha Low-Choy1, Kenneth Donald1, Rohan Jayasinghe, Ebrahim Barzegari2 •
Griffith University1, Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences2
01 Sep 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective study was conducted, with 217 individuals recruited from the Cardiology Ward in the Gold Coast University Hospital (GCUH) and the Robina Cardiac Rehabilitation Centre.
Abstract: Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a multi-disciplinary intervention designed to stabilise, slow, or reverse CVD, restore health following a cardiac event and facilitate the prevention of further events. The Model of Therapeutic Engagement (MTE) is a comprehensive conceptual model for explaining the process of engagement in rehabilitation. Of concern is that the role of socio-environmental factors is absent from explaining individual engagement in the MTE. There is also a lack of prospective studies investigating the impact of socio-environmental barriers on engagement in CR programs over time. This study aimed to expand the MTE, by illuminating the role of socio-environmental barriers in a three-stage process of engagement in CR programs. A prospective study was conducted, with 217 individuals recruited from the Cardiology Ward in the Gold Coast University Hospital (GCUH) and the Robina Cardiac Rehabilitation Centre. The collected data were examined using a structural equation model that added socio-environmental factors into the MTE, using multi-group analyses. In this study, we found that socio-environmental factors were not associated with intention to engage in the CR program, but were related to actual attendance and maintenance of participation in CR programs. Knowing how these socio-environmental barriers affect the process of engagement at different stages may help to tailor more accessible CR programs for the population.

2 citations

Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.1•
A Feasibility Study of the Translation of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Psychosis into an Australian Adult Mental Health Clinical Setting

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Lee Beames1, Esben Strodl2, Frances Dark, Jennifer Wilson, Judith Sheridan2, Nicholas L. Kerswell2 •
Mental Health Services1, Queensland University of Technology2
01 Apr 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: Preliminary evidence is provided on how acceptable, implementable, and adaptable individual or group CBTp may be within a public mental health service in Australia.
Abstract: There is evidence that Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Psychosis (CBTp) is an effective intervention for reducing psychotic symptoms. The recently updated Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists clinical practice guidelines (RANZCP CPG) recommend CBTp for the therapeutic management of schizophrenia and related disorders. Translational research is required to examine how well CBTp can be applied into public mental health services. This feasibility study aimed to provide preliminary evidence on how acceptable, implementable, and adaptable individual or group CBTp may be within a public mental health service in Australia. Twenty-seven participants initially agreed to participate in the study with 16 participants being randomised to either group or individual therapy, 11 starting therapy and 7 completing therapy. The intervention involved approximately 20 h of manualised CBTp. Attendance was higher in the individual therapy. Subjective reports indicated that the therapy was acceptable to all completers. Participants who engaged in individual or group CBTp experienced a similar level of reduction in the severity of hallucinations and delusions. Individual CBTp may be a feasible, acceptable, and effective intervention to include in Australian public mental health services. A pilot trial is now required to provide further evidence for and guidance of how best to translate CBTp protocols to Australian mental health services.
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.15•
‘Treatable and Changeable’: The Effect of Treatment and Malleability Information on Stigma Towards Children with Behavioural Problems and Their Parents

[...]

Sarah Li1, Lucy A. Tully1, Mark R. Dadds1•
University of Sydney1
01 Dec 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: The authors examined the effect of treatment and malleability information on stigmatisation towards children with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and their parents, and on endorsements of causal beliefs.
Abstract: Improving knowledge about childhood mental health issues, reducing stigma, and encouraging appropriate treatment-seeking are important goals for public health. This study examined the effect of treatment and malleability information on stigmatisation towards children with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and their parents, and on endorsements of causal beliefs. In an experimental study, university students (N = 234) were randomly allocated to receive/not receive treatment information (information on the existence and effectiveness of treatment for ODD) and to receive/not receive malleability information (information emphasising brain malleability and the potential to change). Participants then rated four measures of stigma towards a fictitious child with ODD and mother (blame, incompetence, dangerousness, and social distance), and rated their endorsements of causal explanations for ODD. Neither treatment nor malleability information had significant effects on stigmatisation towards either the child or mother. However, this information did impact upon causal beliefs about ODD as stemming from biological or mixed biological/environmental causes. Implications for the future development of public health initiatives and stigma research on childhood mental health are discussed.
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.9•
The Impact of Australian Psychologists’ Education, Beliefs, Theoretical Understanding, and Attachment on the Use and Implementation of Exposure Therapy

[...]

Clancy Rowe1, Maria Kangas1•
Macquarie University1
01 Sep 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the relative contributions of university education, exposure specific training, and beliefs about exposure therapy in relation to the frequency, duration, and intense delivery of ET by Australian psychologists.
Abstract: The objective of this study was to investigate the relative contributions of university education, exposure specific training, and beliefs about exposure therapy (ET) in relation to the frequency, duration, and intense delivery of ET by Australian psychologists. Associations between clinicians’ use of and theoretical conceptualisation of ET, and attachment style were also evaluated. A total of 115 Australian psychologists (N = 94 females) completed an online survey. Findings revealed that a majority of participants used cognitive behaviour therapy (93%) and ET (88%) to treat anxiety disorders, including obsessive-compulsive disorder. The majority who used ET (90%) reported using therapist-assisted in vivo exposure with clients. Findings also showed that therapists spend 42% of session time on exposure. Moreover, therapists who reported more comprehensive training had more positive beliefs about ET. Positive beliefs about ET, and clearer conceptualisation of treatment, were related to greater use and more intense implementation of ET. Psychologists with a more preoccupied or dismissive attachment style were less likely to deliver intense ET. The findings suggest that ET-specific training may be a powerful medium to improving the adoption and application of ET. Clinician's theoretical conceptualisation of ET and interpersonal attachment style are also worthy targets for future research and training in ET.
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2019.16•
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Anxiety Disorders in Young Children: A Dutch Open Trial of the Fun FRIENDS Program

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Malindi van der Mheen1, Jeroen S. Legerstee1, Gwendolyn C. Dieleman1, Manon H.J. Hillegers1, Elisabeth M. W. J. Utens1 •
Boston Children's Hospital1
01 Apr 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined whether young children with anxiety disorders showed less anxiety after participating in the Fun FRIENDS program, which consists of 12 weekly 1.5-hour sessions and was provided in groups of 3 to 5 children.
Abstract: Anxiety disorders in young children are highly prevalent and increase the risk of social, school, and familial problems, and also of psychiatric disorders in adolescence and adulthood. Nevertheless, effective interventions for this age group are lacking. One of the few available interventions is the Fun FRIENDS program. We examined whether young children with anxiety disorders showed less anxiety after participating in Fun FRIENDS. Twenty-eight clinically anxious children (4–8 years old) participated in the cognitive behavioural Fun FRIENDS program. The program consists of 12 weekly 1.5-hour sessions and was provided in groups of 3 to 5 children. At preintervention and direct postintervention, parents completed the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for Children and Child Behavior Checklist. Clinically and statistically significant decreases were found in number of anxiety disorders, symptom interference, emotional and behavioural problems, internalising problems, and anxiety problems. The decrease in anxious/ depressed problems and externalising problems was not significant. Furthermore, higher preintervention anxiety levels predicted more treatment progress, whereas sex and age did not. The Dutch version of Fun FRIENDS is promising in treating anxiety disorders in young children. Randomised controlled trials are needed to draw definite conclusions on the effectiveness of Fun FRIENDS in a clinical setting
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.10•
Death Anxiety, Loss, and Grief in the Time of COVID-19

[...]

Rachel E. Menzies1, Robert A. Neimeyer, Ross G. Menzies2•
University of Sydney1, University of Technology, Sydney2
01 Sep 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: Menzies et al. as mentioned in this paper presented the results of a study at the School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia, Portland Institute for Loss and Transition, Portland, OR, USA.
Abstract: Rachel E. Menzies1*, Robert A. Neimeyer2 and Ross G. Menzies3 School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia, Portland Institute for Loss and Transition, Portland, OR, USA and Graduate School of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia *Corresponding author: Rachel E. Menzies, School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia. Email: rmen9223@uni.sydney.edu.au
Journal Article•10.1017/BEC.2020.11•
A Narrative Review of the Needs of Children in Foster and Kinship Care: Informing a Research Agenda

[...]

Jacqueline Kemmis-Riggs1, John McAloon1•
University of Technology, Sydney1
01 Dec 2020-Behaviour Change
TL;DR: In this article, a review of key systematic reviews and empirical research was conducted to assess the effectiveness of existing foster carer interventions, which indicated a range of methodological characteristics that limit our ability to develop a sound, research-driven, evidence base.
Abstract: As a result of maltreatment, children in care can present with a range of complex needs and challenges. In addition to direct clinical care commonly provided by paediatricians, psychiatrists, and clinical psychologists, the provision of knowledge and skills to foster and kinship carers have become modes of support common in responding to these needs and challenges. A narrative review of key systematic reviews and empirical research was conducted to assess the effectiveness of existing foster carer interventions. Results indicated a range of methodological characteristics that limit our ability to develop a sound, research-driven, evidence base. As a result, we remain limited in our knowledge about which treatments are effective, for which symptoms they are effective, and for which population subgroups they are most likely to be effective. This review provides a summary of identified needs and challenges in the delivery of foster carer interventions. It provides an account of current treatment components and offers a platform for the development and progression of a programme of research in an effort to advance knowledge in the area.

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