
doi: 10.1007/bf01463552
pmid: 688804
Forty-three mothers sought help with management of childhood behaviors. Presenting complaints in half or more of the families included stubbornness, talking back to parents, disobedience and other traits indicative of parent-child interaction difficulties. Pretreatment behavioral observations revealed that mothers shared common characteristics of being low in positive warmth and high in negative and oppositional responses. The children were observed to share common traits of little independent play, frequent frustration, and either ignored their mothers or were verbally and physically oppositional. Behavioral counselling and monitored rehearsal served to reverse many of the behaviors. Almost all mothers reported reduction in problem behaviors. Mothers varied widely in attributing usefulness to different program components.
Counseling, Male, Verbal Behavior, Mothers, Child Behavior Disorders, Mother-Child Relations, Play and Playthings, Attitude, Behavior Therapy, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Child, Maternal Behavior
Counseling, Male, Verbal Behavior, Mothers, Child Behavior Disorders, Mother-Child Relations, Play and Playthings, Attitude, Behavior Therapy, Child, Preschool, Humans, Female, Child, Maternal Behavior
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