NCBI Bookshelf. A service of the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE): Quality-assessed Reviews [Internet]. York (UK): Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (UK); 1995-.
Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE): Quality-assessed Reviews [Internet].
Show detailsCRD summary
This review found that programmes with parental involvement could modify parent-child communication and sexual behaviour of adolescents, but there was a paucity of rigorous studies. The authors' cautious conclusions about the evidence are likely to be reliable.
Authors' objectives
To assess the effectiveness of interventions with parents or caregivers that were intended to improve the sexual health of children in their care.
Searching
Eleven electronic databases including CINAHL, MEDLINE and PsycINFO were searched to 2009 for relevant studies; search terms were reported. The reviewers searched for unpublished studies by checking Open Grey, Google Scholar, Centre for Disease Control websites, the Alan Guttmacher Institute, The National Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, and Child Trends. The reviewers contacted researchers for information on unpublished studies.
Study selection
Primary studies were eligible if they had interventions with parental involvement and outcomes related to the sexual health of the parents' children. Outcomes could be sexual behaviours, unwanted sexual outcomes or proxy indicators such as sexual health knowledge and cognitions, or parent-child communication on sexual activity. A range of study designs were eligible but all studies were required to present baseline and follow-up data.
Most of the studies were conducted in the USA. Interventions included one-to-one support, workshops, homework assignments, videos, written material and media messages. Interventions were undertaken in secondary schools, in the community, at college/tertiary institutions, home-based with videos and mass media interventions; some studies were specifically for parents of children with learning disabilities. The parenting component in most of the interventions was aimed at improving parent-child communication about sex; other intervention programmes provided education on sexual and reproductive health, information and children's future values or future plans, values and regulation of the child's behaviour and parental modelling of appropriate behaviour. The outcomes evaluated included parent-child communication about sex, parental monitoring, sexually transmitted infections and pregnancy, and the sexual knowledge, attitudes, intentions, self-efficacy and behaviour of adolescents.
Two reviewers performed the study selection.
Assessment of study quality
The reviewers did not state they assessed methodological quality.
Data extraction
Data were extracted using standard data extraction forms , and the results were tabulated. Study authors were contacted for additional information when necessary.
Two reviewers extracted data which was checked for accuracy by a third.
Methods of synthesis
The results were summarised in a narrative synthesis and stratified by the setting in which the interventions took place.
Results of the review
Forty-four studies were included in the review; 25 randomised controlled trials, 12 non-randomised studies and seven pre- and post-test studies. Follow-up varied from immediately post-intervention to four years.
Secondary school-based interventions (16 studies): Four of six abstinence-based programmes, and five of seven comprehensive programmes were found to improve parent-child communication. Five secondary school programmes reported reductions in sexual risk behaviour.
Community-based programmes (15 studies): Improvements in parent-child communication were reported in all 11 interventions and in knowledge and/or attitudes in eight interventions and reductions in sexual behaviour were reported in five programmes from a total of seven programmes which included four randomised controlled trials.
College-based programmes (two studies): Participating parents in one programme were more ready and skilled to discuss sexual issues than the parents in a control group after a two-hour session. The second study found increased parent-child communication after a 42-hour programme for undergraduate parents of children aged five years and over. None of these programmes involved the children directly.
Home-based audio or visual programmes (four studies): Improvements were found in the young peoples' knowledge, skills and/or attitudes in four programmes, but not in sexual behaviour in the three programmes that examined this outcome.
Media programmes (three studies): Improvements were identified in parent-child communication in two programmes and in young peoples' knowledge and/or attitudes in the two programmes measuring this outcome. Improvements in sexual behaviour were reported in the one programme in which this was measured.
Programmes for parents of children with learning disabilities (three studies):Improvements on several parenting measures were found in one study. Further results were presented in the paper.
Authors' conclusions
Some interventions with intensive parental involvement could modify the sexual behaviour of adolescents, but evidence in the review was limited by a lack of rigorous evaluations in included studies.
CRD commentary
The review addressed a clear question and criteria for the inclusion of studies in the review were defined. A range of appropriate electronic databases were searched for relevant studies. Attempts were also made to identify unpublished studies. Steps were taken to minimise reviewer errors and biases for study selection and data extraction.
Methodological quality was not formally assessed, but the authors made some judgments about the methodological rigour of the included studies on the basis of study type. The authors' decision to summarise the results in a narrative synthesis appeared to be justified because of the clinical heterogeneity in populations, interventions, outcomes and evaluation measures. The authors stated the attitudinal and behavioural outcomes were self-reported which meant the results for these outcomes were subject to various reporting biases. The limitations of the review were acknowledged by the authors about the lack of rigorous evaluations of interventions, short follow-up durations and potential limits of generalisation of results to populations outside of the USA.
In general, the authors' cautious conclusions regarding the evidence are likely to be reliable.
Implications of the review for practice and research
Practice: The authors stated that future interventions that involve parents in improving the sexual health of their children should focus developing greater parent-child attachment or connectedness, improve parental monitoring and regulation of behaviour, help parents communicate their own values about sexual behaviour and encourage parents to model the behaviours they want their children to follow.
Research: The authors stated that further research should use experimental designs incorporating a range of measurements to evaluate change, sexual health outcomes, with large sample sizes, detailed parental involvement and follow-up periods of at least two years.
Funding
UK Medical Research Council as part of the Sexual Health and Families Programme.
Bibliographic details
Wight D, Fullerton D. A review of interventions with parents to promote the sexual health of their children. Journal of Adolescent Health 2012; Jun 2012. [PubMed: 23260830]
Original Paper URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1054139X12001760
Indexing Status
Subject indexing assigned by CRD
MeSH
Humans; Adolescent; Sexual Behavior; Harm Reduction; Parents
AccessionNumber
Database entry date
25/01/2013
Record Status
This is a critical abstract of a systematic review that meets the criteria for inclusion on DARE. Each critical abstract contains a brief summary of the review methods, results and conclusions followed by a detailed critical assessment on the reliability of the review and the conclusions drawn.
- CRD summary
- Authors' objectives
- Searching
- Study selection
- Assessment of study quality
- Data extraction
- Methods of synthesis
- Results of the review
- Authors' conclusions
- CRD commentary
- Implications of the review for practice and research
- Funding
- Bibliographic details
- Original Paper URL
- Indexing Status
- MeSH
- AccessionNumber
- Database entry date
- Record Status
- Buffer or Brake? The Role of Sexuality-Specific Parenting in Adolescents' Sexualized Media Consumption and Sexual Development.[J Youth Adolesc. 2018]Buffer or Brake? The Role of Sexuality-Specific Parenting in Adolescents' Sexualized Media Consumption and Sexual Development.Overbeek G, van de Bongardt D, Baams L. J Youth Adolesc. 2018 Jul; 47(7):1427-1439. Epub 2018 Mar 13.
- Does the quality of parent-child connectedness matter for adolescents' sexual behaviors in Nairobi informal settlements?[Arch Sex Behav. 2015]Does the quality of parent-child connectedness matter for adolescents' sexual behaviors in Nairobi informal settlements?Sidze EM, Elungata'a P, Maina BW, Mutua MM. Arch Sex Behav. 2015 Apr; 44(3):631-8. Epub 2014 Dec 11.
- A Six-Month Outcome Evaluation of Media Aware Parent, a Parent-Based Media Mediation and Sexual Health Communication Program to Promote Adolescent Sexual Health.[J Health Commun. 2022]A Six-Month Outcome Evaluation of Media Aware Parent, a Parent-Based Media Mediation and Sexual Health Communication Program to Promote Adolescent Sexual Health.Dodson CV, Scull T, Schoemann AM. J Health Commun. 2022 Dec 2; 27(11-12):825-838. Epub 2023 Jan 11.
- Review Parent-based adolescent sexual health interventions and effect on communication outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analyses.[Perspect Sex Reprod Health. 2015]Review Parent-based adolescent sexual health interventions and effect on communication outcomes: a systematic review and meta-analyses.Santa Maria D, Markham C, Bluethmann S, Mullen PD. Perspect Sex Reprod Health. 2015 Mar; 47(1):37-50. Epub 2015 Jan 30.
- Review Effectiveness and experiences of families and support workers participating in peer-led parenting support programs delivered as home visiting programs: a comprehensive systematic review.[JBI Database System Rev Implem...]Review Effectiveness and experiences of families and support workers participating in peer-led parenting support programs delivered as home visiting programs: a comprehensive systematic review.Munns A, Watts R, Hegney D, Walker R. JBI Database System Rev Implement Rep. 2016 Oct; 14(10):167-208.
- A review of interventions with parents to promote the sexual health of their chi...A review of interventions with parents to promote the sexual health of their children - Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE): Quality-assessed Reviews
Your browsing activity is empty.
Activity recording is turned off.
See more...