Title of article :
Modeling the Information Preferences of Parents of Children
with Mental Health Problems: A Discrete Choice Conjoint
Experiment
Author/Authors :
Charles E. Cunningham، نويسنده , , Ken Deal، نويسنده , , Heather Rimas &
Don H. Buchanan، نويسنده , , Michelle Gold &
Katherine Sdao-Jarvie، نويسنده , , Michael Boyle، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Although materials informing parents about children’s
mental health (CMH) problems can improve outcomes,
we know relatively little about the design factors that might
influence their utilization of available resources. We used a
discrete choice conjoint experiment to model the information
preferences of parents seeking mental health services for 6 to
18 year olds. Parents completed 30 choice tasks presenting
experimentally varied combinations of 20 four-level CMH
information content, transfer process, and outcome attributes.
Latent class analysis revealed three segments with different preferences. Parents in the Action segment (43%) chose
materials providing step-by-step solutions to behavioral or
emotional problems. They preferred weekly meetings with
other parents and coaching calls from a therapist. The
Information segment (41%) chose materials helping them
understand rather than solve their child’s problems. These
parents were more sensitive to logistical factors such as
receiving information in groups, the location where information
was available, the modality in which the information was
presented, and the time required to obtain and use the
information. The Overwhelmed segment (16%) reported more
oppositional and conduct problems, felt their children’s
difficulties exerted a greater adverse impact on family
functioning, and reported higher personal depression scores
than those in the Action or Information segments. Nonetheless,
they did not choose information about, or solutions to,
the problems their children presented. Simulations predicted
that maximizing utilization and realizing the potential benefits
of CMH information would require knowledge transfer
strategies consistent with each segment’s preferences.
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology