HFCC 2
HFCC 2
HFCC 2
Aims
Increase +ve parenting skills for fathers who are DA perpetrators
Increase motivation to address their relationship skills
Decrease coercive abusive interactions with (ex)partner and child(ren)
(3) Subculture
- Enabling +ve
parenting
(2) Family
- Increased +ve interactions with
child(ren) and (ex)partner
(1) Triple P + CHANGE
Individual
Increased self-efficacy
Theory
What works and how generally
Desistance
Strengths based important: good lives
Individually tailored, well delivered interventions, targeted to specific
criminogenic needs (one size does not fit all)
Delivered by good facilitators, with good Therapeutic Alliance, group
cohesion, responsive to individuals styles and abilities
Desistance is more than programme response
People need consistent messages, support and interventions delivered
alongside, not in isolation from other life issues
Theory
DA Programmes, DA + Parenting
Small significant effect in DA programmes (+ small effect size) (but see also
www.dur.ac.uk/criva/projectmirabal)
Traditional models of parenting interventions not supported by evidence
Practice evidence shows children are a hook for change
Drive for this project was to capture that desire for the offender to be a
good parent and use that motivation to reduce offending
Operational/Practice Considerations
MOU & Safety
Set up between CJSW, Police Scotland, ASSIST, GCU, to manage safety
Safety of the women and children paramount and shaped model of
project/selection criteria
Opportunity for skill rehearsal a critical component
Participants screened via CJSW and ASSIST prior to being approached
Multi-agency safety reviews before, during and after each group
Project Setup
Training Practitioners (x5 Full days)
Operational Challenges
Pilot Results
Abusers
(M)
Advocates
(M)
Pre
(M)
Post
(M)
2.42
1.26
1.38
1.3
2.7
1.34
1.64
1.57
5.48
6.67
Offender is responsible
3.83
5.24
5.83
5.21
6.51
5.71
Offender should be
punished
3.2
4.25
5.73
5.9
Group Type
Trial
Participants completed some DA change work prior
Voluntary + mandated
All participants receive intervention
Quantitative
Participant psychometrics (pre, post, 6months FU) (reduced volume)
Case file reviews of participants
Police data (pre and post) + matched sample
Qualitative
Qualitative
Semi-structured interviews with participants
Semi-structured interviews with victims
Semi-structured interviews with men mandated but failed to attend
Focus group with practitioners
Interviews with managers (CJSW and ASSIST)
Case studies
Childrens data
Victims
1.
1.
2.
2.
3.
3.
4.
5.
6.
4.
5.
6.
7.
Dads (Perpetrators)
Dads (Perpetrators)
Dads (Perpetrators)
Poor parenting hard to acknowledge; but felt supported; self reflection + guilt
(Qualitative findings)
Dads (Perpetrators)
I felt that I was'nae on my own because other people have made the
same mistakes, I felt that. No' right away in the group because it takes
time for people to open up. I wanted to better myself as a parent but a
lot of people as I said dont want to admit that they've done the wrong
things and it makes them look like a bad parent. But in reality admitting
that you've done it wrong is the way to go because then you can
improve rather than being well I'll just stick to the way I am, I'm alright!
(Qualitative findings)
Dads (Perpetrators)
4.
5.
(Qualitative findings)
Dads (Perpetrators)
Five minutes is no' much but just a wee bit of quality time
makes a difference to the weans, whether you're tired or no,
there was a lot through Triple P I learnt like...changing the
way you think when your kid does something bad like the
example was, what if your kid went into the fridge right and
pulled out a jug of milk, everywhere, the full jug of milk all
over the kitchen. My first reaction before Triple P I'd have
went in you're a stupid wee blah-blah-blah-beep-beep-beepblah-blah-blah! It's totally wrong but I was.
(Triple P completer, Interview 2)
(Qualitative findings)
Dads (Perpetrators)
6.
7.
(Qualitative findings)
Victims
Clip 3 Successes (ASSIST)
Things feel less chaotic at home
Arguing less with (ex)partner and children
He (ex)partners being more respectful to me
(Interview 6)
(Interview 2)
1.
2.
3.
Victims
4. Kids are better behaved
5. Kids are happier
6. Some (ex)partners stopped using tools after a while
(Interview 4)
(Qualitative findings)
Victims
(Interview 2)
(Interview 8)
(Qualitative findings)
Practitioners
Main Positives?
1.
2.
3.
4.
Strong belief that the programme worked for clients who engaged
Increased multi-agency working improved service delivery
Enhanced the quality of their work with client
Enjoyed doing Triple P
Main Challenges?
1.
2.
3.
4.
Practitioners
Whats most Important?
Whats most important?
1.
Parenting should be core
2.
Programme content
3.
Sufficient work relief
4.
Programme readiness / time to prepare clients
5.
Therapeutic alliance
6.
Right group size n=5-6 participants ideal, but for some 1-1?
Operational Learning
Resourcing is critical trained staff, time, managerial
time
Existing collaborative multi-agency relationships
Choose the practitioner leaders carefully
Mandating helps, supported engagement critical
Capturing clients at right time
Interventions well received by those who engaged
Positive multi-agency collaboration
Belief that parenting work should be core to work remit
Monitoring and evaluation getting it right
Quality not quantity
Summary
It takes more than a research evidence base and a good methodology
to make an intervention work
CJSW:
We believe parenting interventions should be part of everyone's
remit i.e. early intervention, public health, criminal justice.
Secure, ring fenced, funding critical
Longitudinal mixed methods research design optimal
Children's data important
Transferring the learning CP opportunities
THANK YOU!