This five-year competing renewal will assess the long-term effects of the Communities That Care (CTC) prevention system. The CTC system is a strategy for mobilizing communities to use prevention science to plan and implement strategic community prevention services. Non-experimental evaluations of CTC suggest that it can assist communities to develop more effective prevention service systems and reduce adolescent health and behavior problems (Arthur et al., 2003;Feinberg et al., 2005;Harachi et al., 1996;Jensen et al., 1997). The current study is the first randomized controlled trial of CTC's efficacy. The CTC system is being implemented with fidelity in the intervention communities of the current study. The study is currently showing early effects on risk exposure and the initiation of delinquent behavior after three years of CTC implementation. The proposed renewal will assess the effects of CTC on key aspects of community prevention service systems and on adolescent drug use, delinquency, violence and risky sexual behaviors nine years after its initiation and four years after study-provided resources supporting CTC end.

Public Health Relevance

The Community Youth Development Study is an experimental test of the Communities That Care (CTC) prevention planning system. It is designed to find out if communities that use the CTC system can improve the public health by reducing rates of adolescent drug use, delinquency, violence, and risky sexual behavior when compared to communities that do not use this approach.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01DA015183-08S1
Application #
8035535
Study Section
Community-Level Health Promotion Study Section (CLHP)
Program Officer
Sims, Belinda E
Project Start
2002-09-01
Project End
2013-06-30
Budget Start
2010-07-01
Budget End
2011-06-30
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$126,643
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Washington
Department
Type
Schools of Social Work
DUNS #
605799469
City
Seattle
State
WA
Country
United States
Zip Code
98195
Oesterle, Sabrina; Kuklinski, Margaret R; Hawkins, J David et al. (2018) Long-Term Effects of the Communities That Care Trial on Substance Use, Antisocial Behavior, and Violence Through Age 21 Years. Am J Public Health 108:659-665
Rhew, Isaac C; Oesterle, Sabrina; Coffman, Donna et al. (2018) Effects of Exposure to the Communities That Care Prevention System on Youth Problem Behaviors in a Community-Randomized Trial: Employing an Inverse Probability Weighting Approach. Eval Health Prof 41:270-289
Guttmannova, Katarina; Skinner, Martie L; Oesterle, Sabrina et al. (2018) The Interplay Between Marijuana-Specific Risk Factors and Marijuana Use Over the Course of Adolescence. Prev Sci :
Guttmannova, Katarina; Wheeler, Melissa J; Hill, Karl G et al. (2017) Assessment of Risk and Protection in Native American Youth: Steps Toward Conducting Culturally Relevant, Sustainable Prevention in Indian Country. J Community Psychol 45:346-362
Briney, John S; Brown, Eric C; Kuklinski, Margaret R et al. (2017) Testing the Question-Behavior Effect of Self-Administered Surveys Measuring Youth Drug Use. J Adolesc Health 61:743-746
Rhew, Isaac C; Monahan, Kathryn C; Oesterle, Sabrina et al. (2016) The Communities That Care Brief Depression Scale: Psychometric Properties and Criterion Validity. J Community Psychol 44:391-398
Gloppen, Kari M; Brown, Eric C; Wagenaar, Bradley H et al. (2016) Sustaining Adoption of Science-based Prevention Through Communities That Care. J Community Psychol 44:78-89
Monahan, Kathryn C; Booth-LaForce, Cathryn (2016) Deflected Pathways: Becoming Aggressive, Socially Withdrawn, or Prosocial with Peers During the Transition to Adolescence. J Res Adolesc 26:270-285
Rhew, Isaac C; Hawkins, J David; Murray, David M et al. (2016) Evaluation of Community-Level Effects of Communities That Care on Adolescent Drug Use and Delinquency Using a Repeated Cross-Sectional Design. Prev Sci 17:177-87
Kuklinski, Margaret R; Fagan, Abigail A; Hawkins, J David et al. (2015) Benefit-Cost Analysis of a Randomized Evaluation of Communities That Care: Monetizing Intervention Effects on the Initiation of Delinquency and Substance Use Through Grade 12. J Exp Criminol 11:165-192

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