Universally delivered interventions can improve adolescent mental health and reduce risk behavior. Of 7 components with consistent signals of effectiveness, 3 had significant effects over multiple outcomes (interpersonal skills, emotional regulation, and alcohol and drug education). Three program components emerged as consistently effective across different outcomes, providing a basis for developing future multioutcome intervention programs…

Author

Sarah Skeen, Christina A. Laurenzi, Sarah L. Gordon, Stefani du Toit, Mark Tomlinson, Tarun Dua, Alexandra Fleischmann, Kid Kohl, David Ross, Chiara Servili, Amanda S. Brand, Nicholas Dowdall, Crick Lund, Claire van der Westhuizen, Liliana Carvajal-Aguirre, Cristina Eriksson de Carvalho, G.J. Melendez-Torres

Citation

Skeen, S., Laurenzi, C., Gordon, S., du Toit, S., Tomlinson, M., Dua, T., Fleischmann, A., Kohl, K., Ross, D., Servili, C., Brand, A., Dowdall, N., Lund, C., van der Westhuizen, C., Carvajal-Aguirre, L., Eriksson de Carvalho, C. and Melendez-Torres, G. (2019). Adolescent Mental Health Program Components and Behavior Risk Reduction: A Meta-analysis. Pediatrics, 144(2), p.e20183488.


Source
Pediatrics
Release date
01/08/2019

Adolescent Mental Health Program Components and Behavior Risk Reduction: A Meta-analysis

Research article

Abstract

Context

Although adolescent mental health interventions are widely implemented, little consensus exists about elements comprising successful models.

Objective

This research aimed to identify effective program components of interventions to promote mental health and prevent mental disorders and risk behaviors during adolescence and to match these components across these key health outcomes to inform future multicomponent intervention development.

Data Sources

A total of 14 600 records were identified, and 158 studies were included.

Study Selection

Studies included universally delivered psychosocial interventions administered to adolescents ages 10 to 19. The research included studies published between 2000 and 2018, using PubMed, Medline, PsycINFO, Scopus, Embase, and Applied Social Sciences Index Abstracts databases. We included randomized controlled, cluster randomized controlled, factorial, and crossover trials. Outcomes included positive mental health, depressive and anxious symptomatology, violence perpetration and bullying, and alcohol and other substance use.

Data Extraction

Data were extracted by 3 researchers who identified core components and relevant outcomes. Interventions were separated by modality; data were analyzed by using a robust variance estimation meta-analysis model, and we estimated a series of single-predictor meta-regression models using random effects.

Results

Universally delivered interventions can improve adolescent mental health and reduce risk behavior. Of 7 components with consistent signals of effectiveness, 3 had significant effects over multiple outcomes (interpersonal skills, emotional regulation, and alcohol and drug education).

Limitations

Most included studies were from high-income settings, limiting the applicability of these findings to low- and middle-income countries. Our sample included only trials.

Conclusions

Three program components emerged as consistently effective across different outcomes, providing a basis for developing future multioutcome intervention programs.


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