The proposed project is a 6-year follow-up of 244 adolescents/young adults and their caregivers who participated in an experimental evaluation of a preventive intervention program for families who have experienced parental death. The evaluation involved comparing two randomly assigned conditions, the Family Bereavement Program versus a self-study comparison condition. The Family Bereavement Program works with caregivers and children/adolescents to improve risk and protective processes, such as parenting, family stability and child/adolescent coping. The program was implemented with a high degree of fidelity, and attendance in the program was excellent. The program was evaluated using multi-method, multi-reporter assessments. Attrition from assessment was very low and was not differential across experimental conditions. Intent-to-treat analyses of immediate posttest and 11 month follow-up data revealed positive effects on family functioning and child/adolescent coping and reductions in child/adolescent and caregiver mental health problems. At 11-month follow-up, the program reduced the rate of clinically significant internalizing problems for high risk children/adolescents. A pattern of interaction effects indicated that greater program benefits were often found for children/adolescents who were functioning more poorly at baseline and for girls. Effect sizes were generally in the moderate range at posttest and at 11-month follow-up. Program effects on mental health problems were stronger at 11-month follow-up than at immediate posttest. The proposed project has four specific aims: 1. To assess effects of the Family Bereavement Program six years following participation, on adolescents/young adults of ages 14- 22 and on their caregivers, 2. To assess factors that mediate program effects, 3. To assess whether program effects are moderated by baseline level of problems, gender or age, and 4. To assess cost-benefit of participation in the Family Bereavement Program. The proposal is consistent with NIMH priorities, to support long-term follow-up of prevention research (NIMH, 1998).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01MH049155-06
Application #
6400479
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-RPHB-1 (01))
Project Start
1994-06-01
Project End
2006-06-30
Budget Start
2001-08-01
Budget End
2002-06-30
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$585,346
Indirect Cost
Name
Arizona State University-Tempe Campus
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
188435911
City
Tempe
State
AZ
Country
United States
Zip Code
85287
Siddique, Juned; de Chavez, Peter J; Howe, George et al. (2018) Limitations in Using Multiple Imputation to Harmonize Individual Participant Data for Meta-Analysis. Prev Sci 19:95-108
Sandler, Irwin; Gunn, Heather; Mazza, Gina et al. (2018) Three perspectives on mental health problems of young adults and their parents at a 15-year follow-up of the family bereavement program. J Consult Clin Psychol 86:845-855
Brown, C Hendricks; Brincks, Ahnalee; Huang, Shi et al. (2018) Two-Year Impact of Prevention Programs on Adolescent Depression: an Integrative Data Analysis Approach. Prev Sci 19:74-94
Brincks, Ahnalee; Montag, Samantha; Howe, George W et al. (2018) Addressing Methodologic Challenges and Minimizing Threats to Validity in Synthesizing Findings from Individual-Level Data Across Longitudinal Randomized Trials. Prev Sci 19:60-73
Sandler, Irwin; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Wolchik, Sharlene et al. (2016) The Effects of the Family Bereavement Program to Reduce Suicide Ideation and/or Attempts of Parentally Bereaved Children Six and Fifteen Years Later. Suicide Life Threat Behav 46 Suppl 1:S32-8
Sandler, Irwin; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Cham, Heining et al. (2016) Long-term effects of the Family Bereavement Program on spousally bereaved parents: Grief, mental health problems, alcohol problems, and coping efficacy. Dev Psychopathol 28:801-18
Schoenfelder, Erin N; Tein, Jenn-Yun; Wolchik, Sharlene et al. (2015) Effects of the Family Bereavement Program on academic outcomes, educational expectations and job aspirations 6 years later: the mediating role of parenting and youth mental health problems. J Abnorm Child Psychol 43:229-41
Luecken, Linda J; Hagan, Melissa J; Sandler, Irwin N et al. (2014) Longitudinal mediators of a randomized prevention program effect on cortisol for youth from parentally bereaved families. Prev Sci 15:224-232
Ayers, Tim S; Wolchik, Sharlene A; Sandler, Irwin N et al. (2013) The Family Bereavement Program: description of a theory-based prevention program for parentally-bereaved children and adolescents. Omega (Westport) 68:293-314
Tein, Jenn-Yun; Coxe, Stefany; Cham, Heining (2013) Statistical Power to Detect the Correct Number of Classes in Latent Profile Analysis. Struct Equ Modeling 20:640-657

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