Background: While parent management training (PMT) has been shown to be an effective treatment for adolescents with externalizing concerns, evidence suggests that effectiveness is not equitable across all types of families. Research suggests that caregiver psychopathology may adversely affect PMT success for adolescents. However, it remains unclear whether research on caregiver psychopathology is integrated within adolescent PMT resources (e.g., treatment manuals).
Objective: A scoping review of commercially available, clinician focused PMT resources was conducted to assess for information on caregiver psychopathology and clinical guidance for addressing caregiver psychopathology.
Methods: A search for commercially available resources was conducted among national treatment databases and book resource websites. Information on caregiver psychopathology was extracted from individual sessions of the PMT resources.
Results: Seven treatment resources met inclusion criteria. The majority of the treatment resources made at least one explicit comment that caregiver psychopathology may impact the course of treatment. There was very limited mention of caregiver psychopathology in skill building sections of the resources.
Conclusions: While most resources mentioned caregiver psychopathology, these comments lacked breadth and depth in providing clinicians with recommendations on how to tailor treatment to caregivers' needs. Recommendations are provided for how PMT programs might be improved in the future to support clinicians when faced with caregiver psychopathology by recognizing inequities and lack of diversity in resource development, using a transdiagnostic perspective (including a transdiagnostic approach to assessment of care-giver psychopathology), and integrating caregiver skill development.
Keywords: Adolescence; Caregiver psychopathology; Evidence-based practice; Parent management training.