Outcomes of Childhood Preventive Intervention Across 2 Generations: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial.

JAMA Pediatrics
Karl G HillRobert D Abbott

Abstract

Trials of preventive interventions for children that were implemented in the 1980s have reported sustained positive outcomes on behavioral and health outcomes into adulthood, years after the end of the intervention. This present study examines whether intervention in childhood may show sustained benefits across generations. To examine possible intervention outcomes on the offspring of individuals (now parents) who participated in the Raising Healthy Children preventive intervention as children in the elementary grades. This nonrandomized controlled trial was conducted in public elementary schools serving high-crime areas in Seattle, Washington. The panel originated in Seattle but was followed up locally and in out-of-state locations over time. Data analyzed in this study were collected from September 1980 to June 2011, with follow-up of the firstborn offspring (aged 1 through 22 years) of 182 parents who had been in the full intervention vs control conditions in childhood. Their children were assessed across 7 waves in 2 blocks (2002-2006 and 2009-2011). Data were analyzed for this article from September 2018 through January 2019. In grades 1 through 6, the Raising Healthy Children intervention provided elementary school teache...Continue Reading

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Citations

Nov 11, 2020·Psychiatric Services : a Journal of the American Psychiatric Association·Kimberly Eaton HoagwoodRobin Peth-Pierce
Oct 31, 2021·Journal of Interpersonal Violence·Siobhan LawlerEmma L Barrett
Dec 29, 2020·Pediatrics·Edward L Schor

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