Publication | Closed Access
The Strong African American Families Program: A cluster-randomized prevention trial of long-term effects and a mediational model.
126
Citations
49
References
2006
Year
Family MedicineSubstance UseFamily InvolvementHealth PreventionFamily StrengtheningSocial Determinants Of HealthYouth Protective FactorsAlcohol MisuseAfrican American StudiesYouth Well-beingPublic HealthHealth SciencesLong-term EffectsMediational ModelPrevention SystemHealth PromotionGroup AssignmentSubstance AbuseSociologyCluster-randomized Prevention TrialPrevention ScienceFamily Dynamic
The Strong African American Families Program, a universal preventive intervention to deter alcohol use among rural African American adolescents, was evaluated in a cluster-randomized prevention trial. This 7-week family skills training program is based on a contextual model in which intervention effects on youth protective factors lead to changes in alcohol use. African American 11-year-olds and their primary caregivers from 9 rural communities (N = 332 families) were randomly selected for study participation. Communities were randomized to prevention and control conditions. Intent-to-treat analyses indicated that fewer prevention than control adolescents initiated alcohol use; those who did evinced slower increases in use over time. Intervention-induced changes in youth protective factors mediated the effect of group assignment on long-term changes in use.
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