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Parental monitoring of teens' activities is a well-established protective factor targeted in many interventions to reduce problem behavior. However, no paper has compiled the extant recommendations on how clinicians should seek to improve parental monitoring-what psychoeducation to give parents, what behaviors to request of parents, and how to support parents in changing monitoring behaviors. Drawing from the Society for Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology's (SCCAP) lists of empirically supported treatments for adolescent problem behaviors, we reviewed the contents of 16 manualized interventions and extracted every mention of parental monitoring, then synthesized and organized the content. Our review yielded 23 recommendations for parents and 16 recommendations for clinicians, which we offer as a preliminary list of evidence-based recommendations on how to improve parental monitoring. Most of the 16 reviewed manuals contained a fraction of the total recommendations (mean = 8.1 out of 39) and only a few included concrete, detailed, in-depth instructions about how to monitor or implement changes in monitoring. Thus, it may be possible to improve the efficacy of existing manualized interventions by borrowing monitoring content and strategies from other manuals. Finally, we identified four major gaps in our existing recommendations that should be addressed in future empirical research. The reviewed manuals offered little advice about (1) how to prioritize among many monitoring recommendations, (2) when (if ever) to decrease monitoring, (3) how to minimize the chances of adverse teen reactions to monitoring, and (4) how to monitor teens using technology (e.g., digital location tracking, social media).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23794925.2024.2306626 | DOI Listing |
JMIR Pediatr Parent
September 2025
Division of Prevention Science, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Background: Alone time with health care providers is critical for adolescents, and several professional organizations recommend it. Alone time with providers promotes better utilization of health services, empowers adolescents to manage their health, and facilitates discussions on sensitive issues. However, only 40% of adolescents have private conversations with clinicians during visits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
September 2025
Center for Neural Science, Department of Biology and Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, New York, United States of America.
Investigating social and independent behavior structure in early life is critical for understanding development and brain maturation in social mammals. However, this investigation necessitates monitoring animals over weeks to months often with subsecond time resolution creating challenges for both lab studies focused on brief observation periods and field studies in which animal tracking can be imprecise. Here we used machine vision and two-week long continuous behavior recordings of families of gerbils, a highly social rodent, in large, undisturbed home environments to quantify the behavioral development of individual pups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Gynaecol Obstet
September 2025
WHO Collaborating Centre for Maternal and Child Health, Institute for Maternal and Child Health IRCCS Burlo Garofolo, Trieste, Italy.
Objective: Despite advancements in maternity quality care worldwide, mistreatment of women during childbirth persists. Currently, there is a gap of knowledge on the occurrence of disrespect and abuse during childbirth in the World Health Organization (WHO) European region.
Methods: Within the IMAgiNE EURO (Improving Maternal Newborn Care in the WHO European Region During COVID-19 Pandemic) study, women 18 years and older who gave birth in healthcare facilities in the WHO European region, were invited to complete an online validated questionnaire regarding quality of maternity care.
Acta Paediatr
September 2025
Department of Child Health, The Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (TNO), Leiden, the Netherlands.
Aim: Early identification of limited intellectual functioning is important for providing support. This study investigated whether a universal child development score (D-score) at 12, 24 and 36 months can predict limited intellectual functioning at 5-10 years of age, in addition to neonatal and parental characteristics.
Methods: A case-control study using developmental milestones and health records from three Dutch child healthcare organisations.
BMJ Public Health
August 2025
Health and Society Group, Social Science Department, Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, Gelderland, The Netherlands.
Introduction: Improving health, in particular of people in a disadvantaged socioeconomic position (SEP), requires multilevel health promotion programmes with community engagement. However, the impacts of such complex and challenging programmes are not yet clear. This study aims to show the impact of a participatory multilevel family health promotion programme in a low-income neighbourhood at intrapersonal, interpersonal, organisational, community and policy level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF