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Journal Article

Citation

Huang HH, Chang CH, Tsai WY, Chu YW, Lin MC, Chen CL. Am. J. Occup. Ther. 2022; 76(3): e7603205030.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, American Occupational Therapy Association)

DOI

10.5014/ajot.2022.047035

PMID

35316329

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: A child's independent mobility, environments, and mastery motivation are critical factors during early development.

OBJECTIVE: To examine the effectiveness of ride-on car (ROC) training with a standing (ROC-Stand) or a sitting posture (ROC-Sit) in enhancing children's mastery motivation and decreasing parenting stress levels.

DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a multiple pretest-posttest design. SETTING: Hospital-based environment in northern Taiwan. PARTICIPANTS: Thirty-nine children with disabilities ages 1 to 3 yr were randomly assigned to ROC-Stand (n = 16), ROC-Sit (n = 12), or conventional therapy (control; n = 11). All groups received 2-hr training sessions two times a week for 12 wk and then a 12-wk follow-up period that involved only regular therapy. MEASURES: Assessments included the Revised Dimensions of Mastery Questionnaire-Chinese version and the Parenting Stress Index.

RESULTS: All groups showed significant changes in social persistence with adults, mastery pleasure, and general competence after the intervention. The two ROC training groups showed a significantly greater decrease in parenting stress than the control group. In addition, increased general competence of the ROC-Stand group also strongly correlated with decreased parent-child dysfunctional interaction.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This RCT verifies the effectiveness of ROC training and offers a novel approach to increase children's mastery motivation and decrease parenting stress.

What This Article Adds: Providing a large amount of active, exploratory experiences with goal-directed, moderately challenging tasks and cooperation with caregivers may result in the greatest benefits to young children with motor disabilities.


Language: en

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