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Gepubliceerd in: Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology 7/2017

05-01-2017

Variation in Response to Evidence-Based Group Preventive Intervention for Disruptive Behavior Problems: A View from 938 Coping Power Sessions

Auteurs: John E. Lochman, Thomas J. Dishion, Caroline L. Boxmeyer, Nicole P. Powell, Lixin Qu

Gepubliceerd in: Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology | Uitgave 7/2017

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Abstract

Prior research suggests that under some conditions, interventions that aggregate high-risk youth may be less effective, or at worse, iatrogenic. However, group formats have considerable practical utility for delivery of preventive interventions, and thus it is crucial to understand child and therapist factors that predict which aggressive children can profit from group intervention and which do not. To address these questions we video-recorded group Coping Power intervention sessions (938 sessions), coded both leader and participant behavior, and analyzed both leader and children’s behaviors in the sessions that predicted changes in teacher and parent, reports of problem behavior at 1-year follow up. The sample included 180 high-risk children (69% male) who received intervention in 30 separate Coping Power intervention groups (six children assigned per group). The evidence-based Coping Power prevention program consists of 32 sessions delivered during the 4th and 5th grade years; only the child component was used in this study. The behavioral coding system used in the analyses included two clusters of behaviors for children (positive; negative) and two for the primary group leaders (group management; clinical skills). Growth spline models suggest that high levels of children’s negative behaviors predicted increases in teacher and parent rated aggressive and conduct problem behaviors during the follow-up period in the three of the four models. Therapist use of clinical skills (e.g., warmth, nonreactive) predicted less increase in children’s teacher-rated conduct problems. These findings suggest the importance of clinical training in the effective delivery of evidence-based practices, particularly when working with high-risk youth in groups.
Voetnoten
1
In follow-up exploratory analyses of the two predictors of teacher-rated Conduct Problems, conducted because of potential colinearity due to significant correlations among predictors, three HLM analyses using on predictor were conducted. When only child negative behavior was used as a predictor, negative behavior significantly predicted the slope for Conduct Problems, T (118) = 2.68, p = 0.008. When only leaders’ Clinical Skills was as a predictor, Clinical Skills significantly predicted the slope for Conduct Problems, T (28) = −2.28, p = 0.03. When only leaders’ Group Management behaviors was a predictor, Group Management did not significantly predict the slope for Conduct Problems, T (28) = −0.54, p = 0.59. Thus, the pattern of predictors in single-predictor models for teacher-rated Conduct Problems exactly paralleled the results for the full model tested.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
Variation in Response to Evidence-Based Group Preventive Intervention for Disruptive Behavior Problems: A View from 938 Coping Power Sessions
Auteurs
John E. Lochman
Thomas J. Dishion
Caroline L. Boxmeyer
Nicole P. Powell
Lixin Qu
Publicatiedatum
05-01-2017
Uitgeverij
Springer US
Gepubliceerd in
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology / Uitgave 7/2017
Print ISSN: 2730-7166
Elektronisch ISSN: 2730-7174
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-016-0252-7

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