Literature DB >> 17663611

An adaptive approach to family intervention: linking engagement in family-centered intervention to reductions in adolescent problem behavior.

Arin M Connell1, Thomas J Dishion, Miwa Yasui, Kathryn Kavanagh.   

Abstract

This study used Complier Average Causal Effect analysis (CACE; see G. Imbens & D. Rubin, 1997) to examine the impact of an adaptive approach to family intervention in the public schools on rates of substance use and antisocial behavior among students ages 11-17. Students were randomly assigned to a family-centered intervention (N = 998) in 6th grade and offered a multilevel intervention that included (a) a universal classroom-based intervention, (b) the Family Check-Up (selected; T. J. Dishion & K. Kavanagh, 2003), and (c) family management treatment (indicated). All services were voluntary, and approximately 25% of the families engaged in the selected and indicated levels. Participation in the Family Check-Up was predicted by 6th-grade teacher ratings of risk, youth reports of family conflict, and the absence of biological fathers from the youths' primary home. Relative to randomized matched controls, adolescents whose parents engaged in the Family Check-Up exhibited less growth in alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use and problem behavior during ages 11 through 17, along with decreased risk for substance use diagnoses and police records of arrests by age 18.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17663611     DOI: 10.1037/0022-006X.75.4.568

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Consult Clin Psychol        ISSN: 0022-006X


  104 in total

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5.  Peer Associations and Coping: The Mediating Role of Ethnic Identity for Urban, African American Adolescents.

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8.  Integrating the Family Check-Up and the parent Coping Power program.

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9.  Collateral benefits of the Family Check-Up on early childhood school readiness: indirect effects of parents' positive behavior support.

Authors:  Erika S Lunkenheimer; Thomas J Dishion; Daniel S Shaw; Arin M Connell; Frances Gardner; Melvin N Wilson; Emily M Skuban
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10.  Collateral benefits of the family check-up in early childhood: primary caregivers' social support and relationship satisfaction.

Authors:  Amber D McEachern; Gregory M Fosco; Thomas J Dishion; Daniel S Shaw; Melvin N Wilson; Frances Gardner
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