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Can discipline education be culturally sensitive?

Smith AE, Hudnut-Beumler J, Scholer SJ
Matern Child Health J

Objectives: Inappropriate discipline such as harsh physical punishment is a social determinant of health. The objective was to determine if a brief parent training intervention that teaches discipline strategies is culturally sensitive. 

Methods: English or Spanish-speaking parents of 1-5 year old children viewed a multimedia program that teaches appropriate discipline strategies. The intervention, Play Nicely, was viewed in the exam room before the physician's visit. Parents viewed 4 of 20 discipline strategies of their choosing; the average viewing time was 7 min. 

Results: Of 204 parents eligible to participate, 197 (96 %) completed the study; 41 % were Black, 31 % were White, and 21 % were Hispanic. At least 80 % of parents from each racial/ethnic group reported that the program built their confidence to care for their child, addressed their family needs, explained things in a way they could understand, respected their family values, and was sensitive to their personal beliefs. Overall, 80 % of parents reported that the program answered individual questions. One parent (0.5 %) reported that the program did not respect her family values. 

Conclusions for Practice: Discipline education can be integrated into the pediatric primary care clinic in a way that is family-centered and culturally sensitive for the majority of parents. The results have implications for the development and implementation of population-based parenting programs and the primary prevention of child abuse and violence.

Smith AE, Hudnut-Beumler J, Scholer SJ. Can discipline education be culturally sensitive?. Matern Child Health J. 2017;21(1):177-186. DOI:10.1007/s10995-016-2107-9. PMID: 27423240

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Publication year
Resource type
Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Health & Health Behaviors
Patient Experience of Care
Population
Children and Youth
Social Determinant of Health
Violence/Safety
Study design
Other Study Design