A Mental Health Intervention for Schoolchildren Exposed to Violence
RAND Corporation · Neurobehavioral Systems · +2 more institutions
Abstract
To evaluate the effectiveness of a collaboratively designed school-based intervention for reducing children's symptoms of PTSD and depression that has resulted from exposure to violence.
A randomized controlled trial conducted during the 2001-2002 academic year. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Sixth-grade students at 2 large middle schools in Los Angeles who reported exposure to violence and had clinical levels of symptoms of PTSD. INTERVENTION: Students were randomly assigned to a 10-session standardized cognitive-behavioral therapy (the Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools) early intervention group (n = 61) or to a wait-list delayed intervention comparison group (n = 65) conducted by trained school mental health clinicians. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Students were assessed before the intervention and 3 months after the intervention on measures assessing child-reported symptoms of PTSD (Child PTSD Symptom Scale; range, 0-51 points) and depression (Child Depression Inventory; range, 0-52 points), parent-reported psychosocial dysfunction (Pediatric Symptom Checklist; range, 0-70 points), and teacher-reported classroom problems using the Teacher-Child Rating Scale (acting out, shyness/anxiousness, and learning problems; range of subscales, 6-30 points).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.27
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 69
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Psychosocial
- Randomized controlled trial
- Intervention (counseling)
- Psychological intervention
- Anxiety
- Mental health
- Clinical psychology