| Literature DB >> 26940348 |
Kimberly A Bender1, Anne DePrince1, Stephanie Begun1, Jessica Hathaway1, Badiah Haffejee1, Nicholas Schau1.
Abstract
Homeless youth frequently experience victimization, and youth with histories of trauma often fail to detect danger risks, making them vulnerable to subsequent victimization. The current study describes a pilot test of a skills-based intervention designed to improve risk detection among homeless youth through focusing attention to internal, interpersonal, and environmental cues. Youth aged 18 to 21 years ( N = 74) were recruited from a shelter and randomly assigned to receive usual case management services or usual services plus a 3-day manualized risk detection intervention. Pretest and posttest interviews assessed youths' risk detection abilities through vignettes describing risky situations and asking youth to identify risk cues present. Separate 2 (intervention vs. control) × 2 (pretest vs. posttest) mixed ANOVAs found significant interaction effects, as intervention youth significantly improved in overall risk detection compared with control youth. Post hoc subgroup analyses found the intervention had a greater effect for youth without previous experiences of indirect victimization than those with previous indirect victimization experiences.Entities:
Keywords: homeless youth; intervention; risk detection
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26940348 DOI: 10.1177/0886260516633208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interpers Violence ISSN: 0886-2605