Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://oxfordhealth-nhs.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/123456789/140
Title: Lighthouse Parenting Programme: Description and pilot evaluation of Mentalization-Based Treatment (MBT) to address child maltreatment.
Authors: Byrne, Gerry
Mein, Clare
Keywords: Maltreatment
Neglect
Child Abuse
Mentalization
Parenting
Issue Date: 2018
Citation: Byrne, Gerry; Sleed, Michelle; Midgley, Nick; Fearon, Pasco; Mein, Clare; Bateman, Anthony; Fonagy, Peter. Lighthouse Parenting Programme: Description and pilot evaluation of Mentalization-Based Treatment (MBT) to address child maltreatment. Clinical Child Psychology 2019
Abstract: This paper introduces an innovative Mentalization - Based Treatment (MBT) parenting intervention for families where children are at risk of maltreatment. The Lighthouse MBT Parenting Programme aims to prevent child maltreatment by promoting sensitive caregiving in parents. The programme is designed to enhance parents’ capacity for curiosity about their child’s inner world, to help parents ‘see’ (understand) their children clearly, to make sense of misunderstandings in their relationship with their child, and to help parents inhibit harmful responses in those moments of misunderstanding and to repair the relationship when harmed. The programme is an adaptation of MBT for borderline and antisocial personality disorders, with a particular focus on attachment and child development. Its strength is in engaging hard to reach parents, who typically do not benefit from parenting programmes. The findings of the pilot evaluation suggest that the programme may be effective in improving parenting confidence and sensitivity and that parents valued the programme and the changes it had helped them to bring about.
Description: Published online at: https://doi.org/10.1177/1359104518807741 Author(s) pre print version only. NOTE: this is not the version published in Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Minor changes may have been made for publication. Eligible users can access the full text via NHS OpenAthens at [https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1359104518807741] (login required).
URI: https://oxfordhealth-nhs.archive.knowledgearc.net/handle/123456789/140
Appears in Collections:Safeguarding



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