Skip navigation.
Home | About | Help | Contact

Archive Abstracts - Details

Bookmark and Share    Back to Abstract Search Back to Abstract Summaries
Age: Adolescents Top of Page
Journal Article
Multidimensional family therapy for young adolescent substance abuse: Twelve-month outcomes of a randomized controlled trial.
Liddle HA, Rowe CL, Dakof GA, Henderson CE, Greenbaum PE. J Consult Clin Psychol 2009; 77(1): 12-25.
Affiliation: Center for Treatment Research on Adolescent Drug Abuse, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine.
DOI: 10.1037/a0014160     What is this?
PMID: 19170450
(Copyright © 2009, American Psychological Association)
Research has established the dangers of early onset substance use for young adolescents and its links to a host of developmental problems. Because critical developmental detours can begin or be exacerbated during early adolescence, specialized interventions that target known risk and protective factors in this period are needed. This controlled trial (n = 83) provided an experimental test comparing multidimensional family therapy (MDFT) and a peer group intervention with young teens. Participants were clinically referred, were of low income, and were mostly ethnic minority adolescents (average age = 13.73 years). Treatments were manual guided, lasted 4 months, and were delivered by community agency therapists. Adolescents and parents were assessed at intake, at 6-weeks post-intake, at discharge, and at 6 and 12 months following treatment intake. Latent growth curve modeling analyses demonstrated the superior effectiveness of MDFT over the 12-month follow-up in reducing substance use (effect size: substance use frequency, d = 0.77; substance use problems, d = 0.74), delinquency (d = 0.31), and internalized distress (d = 0.54), and in reducing risk in family, peer, and school domains (d = 0.27, 0.67, and 0.35, respectively) among young adolescents.

Language: Eng

Bookmark and Share    Back to Abstract Search Back to Abstract Summaries

SafetyLit is a service provided by the Center for Injury Prevention Policy and Practice at the San Diego State University, Graduate School of Public Health in collaboration with the World Health Organization