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relationship intervention. Parenting is a transactional process, whereby the parent and child each
contribute to, and are each affected by, the relationship between them (Ainsworth et al., 1978;
Patterson & Fisher, 2002; Sameroff, 2004).
Consequently, difficulties in parent child relationships are associated with higher levels of
parenting stress (Crnic, Gaze & Hoffman, 2005; Deater-Deckard, 2004) and/or parent mental
health problems (Goodman & Brand, 2009; Seifer & Dickstein, 2000; Zahn-Waxler, Duggal &
Gruber, 2002) and all three have been associated with problematic outcomes for children.
Parenting stress is a negative mental response arising from a mismatch between the
perceived demands of parenting and the resources available to meet them (Abidin, 1992, 1995).
Higher levels of parenting stress have been associated with poorer outcomes for the child and
parent (Crnic & Low, 2002; Deater-Deckard, 2004), including more negative, inconsistent and/or
less involved parenting (Calkins, Hungerford & Dedmon, 2004; Crnic, et al., 2005) feelings of
lower parental self-efficacy (Deater-Deckard, 2004; George & Solomon, 2011), and maladaptive
cognitions regarding the child or self in the caregiving relationship (Bugental & Johnson, 2000;
Dubois-Comtois, Moss, Cyr & Pascuzzo, 2013). Offspring of highly stressed parents may be
vulnerable to insecure attachment in the context of other risks (Crnic & Low, 2002; Deater-
Deckard, 2004; Dubois-Comtois et al., 2013), and have higher levels of behavioral and
emotional problems (Barry, Dunlap, Cotton, Lochman & Wells, 2009), which in turn may
exacerbate parenting stress (Dubois-Comtois et al., 2013; Mackler, Shanahan, Calkins, Keane &
OBrien, 2015).
While the construct of parenting stress is specific to negative affect related to the
parenting role, parent mental health difficulties arising from a variety of concurrent and earlier
life vulnerabilities can also impact negatively on parenting and the developing child (Dix &
Meunier, 2009; Zahn-Waxler et al., 2002). Parent mental health difficulties include clinically
diagnosable disorders (termed mental illness or psychopathology), as well as less severe
mental health problems, whereby parents have elevated mental health symptoms, that may not
necessarily meet criteria for a diagnosis, but still interfere with daily functioning (Huntsman,
2008). Becoming a parent can increase vulnerability to mental illness (Goodman & Brand, 2009;
Slade, Cohen, Sadler & Miller, 2009), particularly for those individuals who have experienced a
difficult caretaking history and/or experience of loss or trauma in childhood (Dozier, Stovall-
McClough & Albus, 2008; Lara & Klein, 1999; Lyons-Ruth & Jacobvitz, 2008).
BLIND
Children of parents with severe mental health disturbance are more likely to develop
emotional and behavioral problems themselves (Breaux, Harvey & Lugo-Candelas, 2014;
Bureau, Easterbrooks, Lyons-Ruth, 2009; Dubois Comtois et al., 2013; Hoffman, Crnic & Baker,
2006) including lower self-esteem, assuming parentified (role reversing) caregiving roles (Kerig,
2005) and showing increased symptomatology in general (e.g., McLaughlin et al., 2014; Zahn-
Waxler et al., 2002). There are several pathways through which parent psychopathology may
impact on the child including genetic vulnerability, in utero environment effects, postnatal
caretaking effects (e.g., through unresponsive, neglectful or harsh parenting) and the stressful
ecological context of family life (Goodman & Brand, 2009; Goodman & Gotlib, 1999; Johnson,
Cohen, Kasen, & Brook, 2006).
Mental health outcomes (but not mental health problems per se) have also been examined
in response to attachment-based interventions for samples of mothers with substance abuse
problems (Suchman, et al., 2010) and first time mothers aged 14-25 years (Sadler et al., 2013).
Suchman and colleagues reported modest improvements in some aspects of caregiving
representations and behavior, and in parent reflective functioning, but only modest improvements
in depression and global indices of distress. Sadler and colleagues reported a range of positive
outcomes for the intervention group children (e.g., more secure and fewer disorganized
attachments at 12 months) and their mothers (e.g., less disrupted caregiving interactions at 4
months, delayed subsequent child bearing) suggesting parent-child relationships were on a better
trajectory, however there were no improvements in maternal mental health (global symptoms and
depression). These limited impacts on mental health symptoms were attributed at least in part to
the fact that baseline symptoms were only rated at a moderate level (Suchman et al., 2010) or
within the normal range (Sadler et al., 2013), and/or that complex mental health difficulties in
high risk groups may not be adequately captured by parent rated symptom checklists alone
(Sadler et al., 2013). Circle of Security 20-week attachment based intervention is a group
delivered, but individualized intervention that aims to improve child attachment outcomes by
improving caregiver relational capacities (Powell, et al., 2014), including through the supported
presentation of selected video clips enabling parents to observe their child and themselves in the
relationship. Specifically, the Circle of Security intervention aims to change caregiving behavior
and shift caregiving representations in a more positive direction, by helping parents to
understand child needs in the caregiving relationship, and the role of the caregiver and
difficulties they arelikely to encounter in meeting these needs. In addition to the focus on
behavior and representations, Circle of Security also explicitly aims to activate, and increase, the
caregivers capacity for reflective functioning.
Previous research with the current sample (families of 1-7 year olds clinically referred
with child behavioral and emotional problems) has shown improvements after the Circle of
Security Intervention in behavioral indices of parent-child attachment (medium and large effect
sizes on indices of security and disorganization respectively), more positive caregiving
representations (large effect size) and improved reflective functioning with a medium effect size
(Huber, McMahon & Sweller, 2015b). A subsequent study with the same sample found improved
child behavioral and emotional adjustment after the Circle of Security intervention, including
parent reported increases in child social and emotional protective factors, parent reported
reductions in child behavioral concerns and internalizing symptoms, and parent and teacher
reported decreases in child externalizing symptoms, all with medium effect sizes (Huber
McMahon & Sweller, 2015a). The current study aimed to extend these findings by examining
whether participating in the Circle of Security 20-week intervention was also associated with
reduced parenting stress and psychological symptomatology. Secondly, given equivocal findings
for attachment based interventions to date, we examined whether any changes in parenting stress
or psychopathology were moderated by the severity of these problems at baseline, as our
previous research with this sample indicated that more impaired families showed greater benefit
in relation to attachment and child behavior outcomes (Huber et al., 2015a, 2015b). We
hypothesized that compared to baseline levels, after the Circle of Security 20-week intervention,
i) parenting stress would decrease, ii) parent symptomatology would decrease and iii) parents
with more impaired baseline functioning (borderline/clinical range parenting stress or
symptomatology) would show greater improvement. Finally, given that the intervention does not
directly target parenting stress or symptomatology, we also explored whether any improvements
in these indices of parent wellbeing were associated with improvements in parent
representations, reflective functioning or child behavior.
Method
The COS 20-week treatment was provided by two trained therapists who co-facilitated
weekly groups lasting 90 minutes with 4-6 parents. Children did not attend sessions and families
were able to use onsite childcare if required. The program comprised i) three psycho-education
sessions of theory and research about attachment-caregiving relationships and psychological
defenses, ii) for each parent, three individualized psychotherapeutic/tape review sessions (using
video-clips taken from the initial and a later interaction assessment in week 15) addressing their
linchpin struggle and capacity with this, and iii) a final session reflecting on the experience and
celebrating changes in the relationship.