TY - JOUR
T1 - Looking Forward
T2 - The Promise of Widespread Implementation of Parent Training Programs
AU - Forgatch, Marion S.
AU - Patterson, Gerald R.
AU - Gewirtz, Abigail H.
PY - 2013/11
Y1 - 2013/11
N2 - Over the past quarter century, researchers have developed a body of parent training programs that have proven effective in reducing child behavior problems, but few of these have made their way into routine practice. This article describes the long and winding road of implementation as applied to children's mental health. Adopting Rogers' (1995) diffusion framework and Fixsen and colleagues' implementation framework (Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005), we review more than a decade of research on the implementation of Parent Management Training-Oregon Model (PMTO). Data from U.S. and international PMTO implementations are used to illustrate the payoffs and the challenges of making empirically supported interventions routine practice in the community. Technological advances that break down barriers to communication across distances, the availability of efficacious programs suitable for implementation, and the urgent need for high quality mental health care provide strong rationales for prioritizing implementation. Over the next quarter of a century, the challenge is to reduce the prevalence of children's psychopathology by creating science-based delivery systems to reach families in need, everywhere.
AB - Over the past quarter century, researchers have developed a body of parent training programs that have proven effective in reducing child behavior problems, but few of these have made their way into routine practice. This article describes the long and winding road of implementation as applied to children's mental health. Adopting Rogers' (1995) diffusion framework and Fixsen and colleagues' implementation framework (Fixsen, Naoom, Blase, Friedman, & Wallace, 2005), we review more than a decade of research on the implementation of Parent Management Training-Oregon Model (PMTO). Data from U.S. and international PMTO implementations are used to illustrate the payoffs and the challenges of making empirically supported interventions routine practice in the community. Technological advances that break down barriers to communication across distances, the availability of efficacious programs suitable for implementation, and the urgent need for high quality mental health care provide strong rationales for prioritizing implementation. Over the next quarter of a century, the challenge is to reduce the prevalence of children's psychopathology by creating science-based delivery systems to reach families in need, everywhere.
KW - empirically supported intervention
KW - implementation science
KW - parent training
KW - PMTO
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84887176795&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/1745691613503478
DO - 10.1177/1745691613503478
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AN - SCOPUS:84887176795
SN - 1745-6916
VL - 8
SP - 682
EP - 694
JO - Perspectives on Psychological Science
JF - Perspectives on Psychological Science
IS - 6
ER -