Abstract

ABSTRACT Engagement of parents in interventions for their children has many reported benefits. Despite recent advances in conceptualisations of parent engagement within child development and rehabilitation fields, there are limited understandings of parent engagement from a behaviour analytic account. This study aimed to understand how parents experience engagement in child-focused behaviour analytic interventions in Aotearoa New Zealand. An Interpretive Description study was undertaken, involving 14 semi-structured interviews with a sample of 15 parents who had experienced a child-focused behavioural intervention. Four themes were developed including a) the system as the environment, b) what parents bring, c) what clinicians bring, and d) where engagement happens. Themes are presented using an analogy of a river ecosystem, detailing how each theme comes together into an intervention context, where engagement is negotiated through humble communication, development of working relationships, and responsive approaches to intervention delivery. Findings support behaviour analysts attending to antecedent conditions for parent engagement, in efforts to further effective intervention, rather than prioritising focus on treatment adherence at the outset of intervention delivery. The outcomes of the study closely align with other allied health literatures, offering behaviour analysts insight into parent engagement from related service delivery contexts.

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