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What Motivates Participation and Dropout Among Low‐Income Urban Families of Color in a Prevention Intervention?<sup>*</sup>
212
Citations
40
References
2001
Year
Family InvolvementEducationHealth DisparitiesProgram LocationSocial ExclusionFamily StrengtheningSocial Determinants Of HealthLow‐income Urban FamiliesSocial SciencesProgram EvaluationRaceIntervention ScienceAfrican American StudiesParent Training StudyCollege PipelineEducational DisadvantagePublic HealthRacismLow‐income Urban ParentsRacial EquityChild Well-beingUnderserved PopulationHealth PromotionHealth EquityParent LeadershipDisadvantaged BackgroundCommunity ParticipationSociologyFamily PsychologyPrevention SciencePrevention Intervention
Low‐income urban parents of color enrolled in a parent training study were interviewed to understand what motivated their participation and what led 30% of them to subsequently drop out. Most enrolled because they wanted to be better parents. Most dropped out because of time and schedule constraints. Retention was higher when parents' motivations for participation matched program goals. Program location and qualities of the recruiter were cited most often as important; financial compensation was cited least often as important.
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