Publication | Open Access
Preventing adolescent depression: An evaluation of the Problem Solving For Life program.
269
Citations
52
References
2003
Year
Family MedicineQuality Of LifeAdolescent Behavioral HealthMental Health InterventionMental HealthChild Mental HealthAdolescencePsychologyAdolescent MedicineIntervention ScienceYouth Well-beingLife ProgramHigh RiskHealth SciencesTeen Mental HealthAdolescent DepressionPsychiatryDepressionAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentAdolescent Primary CareProblem SolvingPrevention ScienceMedicine
This study evaluated the effectiveness of the Problem Solving For Life program as a universal approach to the prevention of adolescent depression. Short-term results indicated that participants with initially elevated depressions scores (high risk) who received the intervention showed a significantly greater decrease in depressive symptoms and increase in life problem-solving scores from pre- to postintervention compared with a high-risk control group. Low-risk participants who received the intervention reported a small but significant decrease in depression scores over the intervention period, whereas the low-risk controls reported an increase in depression scores. The low-risk group reported a significantly greater increase in problem-solving scores over the intervention period compared with low-risk controls. These results were not maintained, however, at 12-month follow-up.
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