%0 Journal Article %J Prevention Science %D 2023 %T Testing cross-generational effects of the Raising Healthy Children intervention on young adult offspring of intervention participants %A Bailey, Jennifer A %A Pandika, Danielle %A Le, Vi T. %A Epstein, Marina %A Steeger, Christine M. %A Hawkins, J David %B Prevention Science %V 24 %P 1376-1385 %8 10/1023 %G eng %N 7 %R 10.1007/s11121-023-01583-5 %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Adolescent Health %D 2023 %T Tobacco use patterns from adolescence to young adulthood among Latinx youth from rural communities %A Pandika, Danielle %A Guttmannova, Katarina %A Skinner, Martie L. %A Sanchez-Rodriguez, Mariel %A McNeish, Daniel %A Morales, Leo S. %A Oesterle, Sabrina %B Journal of Adolescent Health %V 74 %P 761-768 %8 10/2023 %G eng %U 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2023.05.016 %N 3 %R 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2023.05.016 %0 Journal Article %J Prevention Science %D 2023 %T Two-year risk behavior outcomes from Connecting, a prevention program for caregivers and youth in foster care %A Haggerty, Kevin P. %A Barkan, Susan E. %A Caouette, Justin D. %A Skinner, Martie L. %A Hanson, Koren %B Prevention Science %V 24 %P 15-26 %G eng %N 1 %0 Journal Article %J JAMA Network Open %D 2022 %T Trajectories of handgun carrying in rural communities from early adolescence to young adulthood %A Ellyson, Alice M. %A Gause, Emma %A Oesterle, Sabrina %A Kuklinski, Margaret R. %A Briney, John S. %A Weybright, Elizabeth H. %A Haggerty, Kevin P. %A Lyons, Vivian H. %A Schleimer, Julia P. %A Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali %B JAMA Network Open %V 5 %P e225127 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Psychology of Addictive Behaviors %D 2020 %T A trait-like propensity to experience internalizing symptoms is associated with problem alcohol involvement across adulthood, but not adolescence %A King, Kevin M. %A Feil, Madison C. %A Halvorson, Max A. %A Kosterman, Rick %A Bailey, Jennifer A. %A Hawkins, J D %B Psychology of Addictive Behaviors %V 34 %P 756–771 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Drug and Alcohol Dependence %D 2019 %T Time-varying effects of family smoking and family management on adolescent daily smoking: The moderating roles of behavioral disinhibition and anxiety %A Steeger, Christine M. %A Epstein, Marina %A Hill, Karl G. %A Kristman-Valente, Allison N. %A Bailey, Jennifer A. %A Lee, Jungeun O. %A Kosterman, Rick %B Drug and Alcohol Dependence %V 204 %P 107572 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of Adolescent Health %D 2017 %T Testing the question-behavior effect of self-administered surveys measuring youth drug use %A Briney, John S. %A Brown, Eric C. %A Kuklinski, Margaret R. %A Oesterle, Sabrina %A Hawkins, J D %B Journal of Adolescent Health %V 61 %P 743-746 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Development and Psychopathology %D 2017 %T Time-varying effects of families and peers on adolescent marijuana use: Person-environment interactions across development %A Epstein, Marina %A Hill, Karl G. %A Roe, Stephanie S. %A Bailey, Jennifer A. %A Iacono, William G. %A McGue, Matt %A Kristman-Valente, Allison %A Catalano, Richard F. %A Haggerty, Kevin P. %B Development and Psychopathology %V 29 %P 887-900 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research %D 2017 %T Translating grand challenges from concept to community: The “Communities in Action” experience %A Haggerty, Kevin P. %A Barton, Vaughnetta J. %A Catalano, Richard F. %A Spearmon, Margaret L. %A Elion, Edith C. %A Reese, Raymonda C. %A Uehara, Edwina S. %B Journal of the Society for Social Work and Research %V 8 %P 137-159 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Behavior Genetics %D 2016 %T A test-replicate approach to candidate gene research on addiction and externalizing disorders: A collaboration across five longitudinal studies %A Samek, Diana R. %A Bailey, Jennifer A. %A Hill, Karl G. %A Wilson, Sylia %A Lee, Susanne %A Keyes, Margaret A. %A Epstein, Marina %A Smolen, Andrew %A Miller, Michael %A Winters, Ken C. %A Hawkins, J D %A Catalano, Richard F. %A Iacono, William G. %A McGue, Matt %B Behavior Genetics %I Springer %V 46 %P 608-626 %G eng %0 Journal Article %J Residential Treatment for Children & Youth %D 2016 %T Therapeutic Residential Care for Children and Youth: A Consensus Statement of the International Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care %A Whittaker, James K. %A Holmes, Lisa %A Del Valle, Jorge F. %A Ainsworth, Frank %A Andreassen, Tore %A Anglin, James %A Bellonci, Christopher %A Berridge, David %A Bravo, Amaia %A Canali, Cinzia %A Courtney, Mark %A Currey, Laurah %A Daly, Daniel %A Gilligan, Robbie %A Grietens, Hans %A Harder, Annemiek %A Holden, Martha %A James, Sigrid %A Kendrick, Andrew %A Knorth, Erik %K Children -- Institutional care %K Foster Home Care %K Group homes for children %K Institutional care %K Residential care %X

 The article focuses on the consensus statement on therapeutic residential care developed jointly by an international consortium of experts on residential care. It highlights the efforts of British Prime Minister David Cameron in reviewing the role and purpose of residential placements within the wider child welfare system. Information about the working definition of therapeutic residential care is also offered.

%B Residential Treatment for Children & Youth %V 33 %P 89-106 %8 Apr-Jun2016 %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1080/0886571X.2016.1215755 %0 Journal Article %J Dev Psychopathol %D 2016 %T Time-varying effects of families and peers on adolescent marijuana use: Person-environment interactions across development. %A Epstein, Marina %A Hill, Karl G %A Roe, Stephanie S %A Bailey, Jennifer A %A Iacono, William G %A McGue, Matt %A Kristman-Valente, Allison %A Catalano, Richard F %A Haggerty, Kevin P %X

Studies have demonstrated that the effects of two well-known predictors of adolescent substance use, family monitoring and antisocial peers, are not static but change over the course of adolescence. Moreover, these effects may differ for different groups of youth. The current study uses time-varying effect modeling to examine the changes in the association between family monitoring and antisocial peers and marijuana use from ages 11 to 19, and to compare these associations by gender and levels of behavioral disinhibition. Data are drawn from the Raising Healthy Children study, a longitudinal panel of 1,040 youth. The strength of association between family monitoring and antisocial peers and marijuana use was mostly steady over adolescence, and was greater for girls than for boys. Differences in the strength of the association were also evident by levels of behavioral disinhibition: youth with lower levels of disinhibition were more susceptible to the influence of parents and peers. Stronger influence of family monitoring on girls and less disinhibited youth was most evident in middle adolescence, whereas the stronger effect of antisocial peers was significant during middle and late adolescence. Implications for the timing and targeting of marijuana preventive interventions are discussed.

%B Dev Psychopathol %P 1-14 %8 2016 Jul 15 %G ENG %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27417425?dopt=Abstract %R 10.1017/S0954579416000559 %0 Journal Article %J J Adolesc Health %D 2013 %T Tests of the mitigating effects of caring and supportive relationships in the study of abusive disciplining over two generations. %A Herrenkohl, Todd I %A Klika, J B %A Brown, Eric C %A Herrenkohl, Roy C %A Leeb, Rebecca T %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Adult Survivors of Child Abuse %K Child %K Child Abuse %K Child, Preschool %K Empathy %K Family Relations %K Female %K Humans %K Infant %K Intergenerational Relations %K Longitudinal Studies %K Male %K Regression Analysis %K Sex Factors %K Sexual Partners %K Social Class %K Social Support %X

PURPOSE: To examine evidence of the continuity in abusive discipline across two generations (G1 and G2) and the role of safe, stable, and nurturing relationships (SSNRs) as protective factors.

METHODS: Data are from the Lehigh Longitudinal Study, a prospective investigation of the causes and consequences child maltreatment that began in the 1970s with a sample of 457 children and their parents. Data were most recently collected in 2008-2010 from 80% of the original child sample (N = 357) when they were adults age 36 years on average. Of those assessed as adults, 268 participants (G2s) were parenting children and thus comprise the analysis sample. Analyses examined the association between harsh physical discipline practices by G1 parents and G2's reports of similarly severe discipline practices used in parenting their own children. Analyses also investigated the direct and interactive (protective) effects of SSNR variables that pertain to the care, warmth, and support children received from their mothers, fathers, and siblings over their lifetimes. A measure of an adult partner's warmth and support was also included. A case-level examination of G2 harsh discipliners was included to investigate other forms of past and more recent forms of abuse exposure.

RESULTS: Results show a significant predictive association between physical discipline by G1 and G2 parents (β = .30; p < .05; odds ratio, 1.14; confidence interval, 1.04-1.26), after accounting for childhood socioeconomic status and gender. Whereas being harshly disciplined as a child was inversely related to reports of having had a caring relationship with one's mother (r = -.25; p < .01), only care and support from one's father predicted a lower risk of harsh physical discipline by G2s (β = -.24; p < .05; odds ratio, .74; confidence interval, .59-.92). None of the SSNR variables moderated the effect of G1 discipline on G2 discipline. A case-level examination of the abusive histories of G2 harsh discipliners found they had in some instances been exposed to physical and emotional abuse by multiple caregivers and by adult partners.

CONCLUSIONS: There is continuity in physical disciplining over two generations. SSNRs measured in this study did not mediate or moderate the effect of G1 on G2 harsh physical discipline, although care and support from fathers was inversely related to the likelihood of G2 harsh physical discipline. This relationship is independent of abuse in childhood. Research is needed to identify factors that interrupt the intergenerational continuity of harsh physical (abusive) disciplining so that promising interventions can be developed and implemented.

%B J Adolesc Health %V 53 %P S18-24 %8 2013 Oct %G eng %N 4 Suppl %R 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2013.04.009 %0 Journal Article %J Suicide Life Threat Behav %D 2013 %T Trajectories of depressive symptoms and externalizing behaviors across adolescence: associations with histories of suicide attempt and ideation in early adulthood. %A Kerr, David C R %A Reinke, Wendy M %A Eddy, J Mark %K Adolescent %K Behavioral Symptoms %K Case-Control Studies %K Child %K Depression %K Female %K Humans %K Logistic Models %K Longitudinal Studies %K Male %K Risk %K Risk Factors %K Sex Factors %K Suicidal Ideation %K Suicide, Attempted %K Surveys and Questionnaires %K Young Adult %X

We examined associations between adolescent problem trajectories and suicide risk outcomes in 361 community participants. Depressive symptoms (self-report) and externalizing behaviors (parent report) were assessed six times from grades 5 to 10. Parallel process linear growth curves indicated that lifetime suicide attempt history assessed to age 25 was associated with higher intercept (grade 5) and slope (increases from grades 5 to 10) of depressive symptoms and higher slope of externalizing behaviors. Both problem intercepts predicted suicidal ideation at ages 18 to 25 years. Adolescent depressive and externalizing symptom trajectories showed independent associations with suicide risk. Preventive intervention that occurs prior to the developmental period in which suicidal thoughts and behaviors show peak prevalence is expected to prevent suicide.

%B Suicide Life Threat Behav %V 43 %P 50-66 %8 2013 Feb %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1111/j.1943-278X.2012.00127.x %0 Journal Article %J European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research. Special Issue on: Compassionate Criminology: The Legacy of Josine Junger-Tas %D 2013 %T Transforming prevention systems in the United States and the Netherlands using Communities That Care %A Steketee, Majone %A Oesterle, Sabrina %A Jonkman, Harrie %A Hawkins, J D %A Haggerty, Kevin P %A Aussems, Claire %X

Josine Junger-Tas introduced the Communities That Care (CTC) prevention system to the Netherlands as a promising approach to address the growing youth violence and delinquency. Using data from a randomized trial of CTC in the United States and a quasi-experimental study of CTC in the Netherlands, this article describes the results of a comparison of the implementation of CTC in 12 U.S. communities and 5 Dutch neighborhoods. CTC communities in both countries achieved higher stages of a science-based approach to prevention than control communities, but full implementation of CTC in the Netherlands was hampered by the very small list of prevention programs tested and found effective in the Dutch context.

%B European Journal on Criminal Policy and Research. Special Issue on: Compassionate Criminology: The Legacy of Josine Junger-Tas %V 19 %P 99-116 %8 2013 Jun 1 %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1007/s10610-012-9194-y %0 Journal Article %J JAMA Pediatr %D 2013 %T Twelve-month follow-up of cognitive behavioral therapy for children with functional abdominal pain. %A Levy, Rona L %A Langer, Shelby L %A Walker, Lynn S %A Romano, Joan M %A Christie, Dennis L %A Youssef, Nader %A DuPen, Melissa M %A Ballard, Sheri A %A Labus, Jennifer %A Welsh, Ericka %A Feld, Lauren D %A Whitehead, William E %K Abdominal Pain %K Adaptation, Psychological %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Child %K Cognitive Therapy %K Female %K Follow-Up Studies %K Gastrointestinal Diseases %K Humans %K Illness Behavior %K Linear Models %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Pain Measurement %K Parent-Child Relations %K Prospective Studies %K Treatment Outcome %X

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a brief intervention for children with functional abdominal pain and their parents' responses to their child's pain resulted in improved coping 12 months later.

DESIGN: Prospective, randomized, longitudinal study.

SETTING: Families were recruited during a 4-year period in Seattle, Washington, and Morristown, New Jersey.

PARTICIPANTS: Two hundred children with persistent functional abdominal pain and their parents.

INTERVENTIONS: A 3-session social learning and cognitive behavioral therapy intervention or an education and support intervention.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Child symptoms and pain-coping responses were monitored using standard instruments, as was parental response to child pain behavior. Data were collected at baseline and after treatment (1 week and 3, 6, and 12 months after treatment). This article reports the 12-month data.

RESULTS: Relative to children in the education and support group, children in the social learning and cognitive behavioral therapy group reported greater baseline to 12-month follow-up decreases in gastrointestinal symptom severity (estimated mean difference, -0.36; 95% CI, -0.63 to -0.01) and greater improvements in pain-coping responses (estimated mean difference, 0.61; 95% CI, 0.26 to 1.02). Relative to parents in the education and support group, parents in the social learning and cognitive behavioral therapy group reported greater baseline to 12-month decreases in solicitous responses to their child's symptoms (estimated mean difference, -0.22; 95% CI, -0.42 to -0.03) and greater decreases in maladaptive beliefs regarding their child's pain (estimated mean difference, -0.36; 95% CI, -0.59 to -0.13).

CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest long-term efficacy of a brief intervention to reduce parental solicitousness and increase coping skills. This strategy may be a viable alternative for children with functional abdominal pain.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00494260.

%B JAMA Pediatr %V 167 %P 178-84 %8 2013 Feb %G eng %N 2 %R 10.1001/2013.jamapediatrics.282 %0 Journal Article %J Res Soc Work Pract %D 2011 %T A Telephone Intervention for Substance-Using Adult Male Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence. %A Mbilinyi, Lyungai F %A Neighbors, Clayton %A Walker, Denise D %A Roffman, Roger A %A Zegree, Joan %A Edleson, Jeffrey %A O'Rourke, Allison %X

OBJECTIVE: To preliminarily evaluate telephone-delivered motivational enhancement therapy (MET) in motivating unadjudicated and nontreatment seeking intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetrators, who also use substances, to self-refer into treatment. METHOD: 124 adult men were recruited via a multimedia marketing campaign and were randomly assigned to the intervention (MET) or comparison group following a baseline assessment. Participants in the MET condition received a personalized feedback report on their IPV and substance-use behaviors, consequences, and social norms beliefs. RESULTS: Results supported the likely effectiveness of MET in short-term reduction of IPV behavior, increasing motivation for treatment seeking, and changing perceived norms for IPV and substance abuse (SA). CONCLUSIONS: Applications for brief MET interventions to facilitate voluntary treatment entry among substance-using IPV perpetrators are discussed.

%B Res Soc Work Pract %V 21 %P 43-56 %8 2011 Jan 27 %G eng %N 1 %R 10.1177/1049731509359008 %0 Journal Article %J Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse %D 2011 %T Ten take home lessons from the first 10 years of the CTN and 10 recommendations for the future. %A Carroll, Kathleen M %A Ball, Samuel A %A Jackson, Ron %A Martino, Steve %A Petry, Nancy M %A Stitzer, Maxine L %A Wells, Elizabeth A %A Weiss, Roger D %K Clinical Trials as Topic %K Community Health Services %K Humans %K National Institute on Drug Abuse (U.S.) %K Outcome Assessment (Health Care) %K Research Design %K Substance-Related Disorders %K United States %X

BACKGROUND: The first 10 years of the National Institute on Drug Abuse's Clinical Trials Network (CTN) yielded a wealth of data on the effectiveness of a number of behavioral, pharmacological, and combined approaches in community-based settings.

METHODS: We summarize some of the methodological contributions and lessons learned from the behavioral trials conducted during its first ten years, including the capacity and enormous potential of this national research infrastructure.

RESULTS: The CTN made contributions to the methodology of effectiveness research; new insights from secondary analyses; the extent to which approaches with strong evidence bases, such as contingency management, extend their effectiveness to real world clinical settings; new data on 'standard treatment' as actually practiced in community programs, the extent to which retention remains a major issue in the field; important data on the safety of specific behavioral therapies for addiction; and heightened the importance of continued sustained attention to bridging the gap between treatment and research.

CONCLUSIONS: Areas of focus for the CTN's future include defining common outcome measures to be used in treatment outcome studies for illicit drugs; incorporating performance indicators and measures of clinical significance; conducting comparative outcome studies; contributing to the understanding of effective treatments of comorbidity; reaching underserved populations; building implementation science; understanding long-term outcomes of current treatments and sustaining treatment effects; and conducting future trials more efficiently.

%B Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse %V 37 %P 275-82 %8 2011 Sep %G eng %N 5 %R 10.3109/00952990.2011.596978 %0 Journal Article %J Prev Sci %D 2010 %T Testing the universality of the effects of the communities that care prevention system for preventing adolescent drug use and delinquency. %A Oesterle, Sabrina %A Hawkins, J D %A Fagan, Abigail A %A Abbott, Robert D %A Catalano, Richard F %K Adolescent %K Female %K Humans %K Juvenile Delinquency %K Male %K Preventive Health Services %K Substance-Related Disorders %X

Universal community-oriented interventions are an important component in the prevention of youth health and behavior problems. Testing the universality of the effects of an intervention that was designed to be universal is important because it provides information about how the program operates and for whom and under what conditions it is most effective. The present study examined whether the previously established significant effects of the universal, community-based Communities That Care (CTC) prevention program on the prevalence of substance use and the variety of delinquent behaviors held equally for boys and girls and in risk-related subgroups defined by early substance use, early delinquency, and high levels of community-targeted risk at baseline. Interaction analyses of data from a panel of 4,407 students followed from Grade 5 to Grade 8 in the first randomized trial of CTC in 12 matched community pairs suggests that CTC reduced students' substance use and delinquency equally across risk-related subgroups and gender, with two exceptions: The effect of CTC on reducing substance use in 8th grade was stronger for boys than girls and the impact of CTC on reducing 8th-grade delinquency was stronger for students who were nondelinquent at baseline.

%B Prev Sci %V 11 %P 411-23 %8 2010 Dec %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1007/s11121-010-0178-1 %0 Journal Article %J Child Abuse Negl %D 2010 %T Trauma focused CBT for children with co-occurring trauma and behavior problems. %A Cohen, Judith A %A Berliner, Lucy %A Mannarino, Anthony %K Child %K Child Abuse %K Child Behavior Disorders %K Cognitive Therapy %K Combined Modality Therapy %K Comorbidity %K Crisis Intervention %K Education %K Evidence-Based Medicine %K Family Therapy %K Humans %K Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic %K Transfer (Psychology) %X

OBJECTIVE: Childhood trauma impacts multiple domains of functioning including behavior. Traumatized children commonly have behavioral problems that therapists must effectively evaluate and manage in the context of providing trauma-focused treatment. This manuscript describes practical strategies for managing behavior problems in the context of trauma-focused evidence-based treatment (EBT) using a commonly implemented EBT for traumatized children.

METHODS: The empirical literature is reviewed and practical strategies are described for conducting trauma- and behavioral-focused assessments; engaging families in trauma- and behavioral-focused treatment; treatment-planning that includes a balance of both trauma and behavioral foci; managing ongoing behavioral problems in the context of providing trauma-focused treatment; managing behavioral crises ("crises of the week"); addressing overwhelming family or social problems; and steps for knowledge transfer.

RESULTS: Trauma-focused EBT that integrate behavioral management strategies can effectively manage the behavioral regulation problems that commonly occur in traumatized children.

CONCLUSIONS: Addressing trauma-related behavioral problems is an important part of trauma-focused treatment and is feasible to do in the context of using common trauma-focused EBT.

PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Integrating effective behavioral interventions into trauma-focused EBT is essential due to the common nature of behavioral regulation difficulties in traumatized children.

%B Child Abuse Negl %V 34 %P 215-24 %8 2010 Apr %G eng %N 4 %R 10.1016/j.chiabu.2009.12.003