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Preventive Sessions After Divorce
Protect Children into Teens
Divorcing families who participated in a prevention program markedly
reduced the likelihood of their
children developing mental disorders as
adolescents, say NIMH-funded scientists. Structured group sessions for
mothers and children later halved rates of
mental disorders in the teen
years, among other benefits, in the first study to document long-term
effects of such preventive interventions using a randomized experimental
trial.
Prevalence of mental disorders rose to 23.5 percent among teens in
families that did not receive active interventions, compared to only 11
percent in families who received the most comprehensive intervention. The
program also reduced acting out,
drug and alcohol use and
sexual
promiscuity. Drs. Sharlene Wolchik, Iwin Sandler, and colleagues at Arizona
State University, Tempe, report on their 6-year follow-up of 218 families in
the October 16, 2002 Journal of the American Medical Association.
About 1.5 million children experience the divorce of their parents each
year – ultimately 40 percent of all children. While most adapt well, 20-25
percent suffer significant adjustment problems as teenagers. The negative
impact often persists into adulthood, resulting in nearly twice the normal
prevalence of mental health problems and impaired educational attainment,
socioeconomic and family well-being.
“The skills training program’s breadth of effect cut across multiple
mental health, substance use and sexual behavior problems,” said Sandler.
“It reduced the 1-year prevalence of mental disorder in these teens by 50
percent, boosting their chances of avoiding serious mental health problems
by more than four-to-one.”
The divorcing families, with children then age 9-12, were randomly
assigned to one of three preventive interventions for mothers and their
children, conducted in the Phoenix area New Beginnings Program in l992-l993:
Mother Program -- 11 group sessions in which two clinicians
focused on improving the mother-child relationship, discipline, increasing
father’s access to the child, and reducing conflict between the parents.
Each mother also had two structured individual sessions.
Mother Plus Child Program -- the mother program, plus 11
structured group sessions for children, designed to improve coping, the
mother-child relationship, and reduce negative thoughts. Based on
social-cognitive theory, the children learned to label feelings, solve
problems, and to reframe their thinking in a positive way in dealing with
the stress of divorce.
Literature Control condition – mothers and children each received
three books on divorce adjustment.
After 6 years, the researchers followed up 91 percent of the families,
whose children then averaged nearly 17 years old. Eighty percent of the
teens were living with their mothers. The two active interventions led to
more favorable outcomes than the control condition for all problems
assessed. Effects proved greatest for children who entered the study with
the most problems. Although the Mother and Mother Plus Child Programs
finished in a statistical dead heat overall, each showed certain strengths.
When evaluated 6 months after the trial, children who had started out at
highest risk of externalizing problems – aggression, hostility – had
benefited from the Mother Program and the Mother Plus Child Program. At the
six-year follow-up, the Mother Program also led to significantly less
alcohol, marijuana, and other drug use for those who were initially at
higher risk. Teens who had been in the Literature Control condition had more
than twice as many sexual partners as those exposed to the Mother Plus Child
Program. Again, the latter group also showed a significantly reduced 1-year
prevalence of mental disorders; the odds of Literature Control condition
teens having a mental disorder diagnosis were 4.50 times higher.
“The impact of the programs on reducing externalizing problems is
especially noteworthy,” said Wolchik. “Children of divorce are at high risk
for these problems, which have high individual and social costs.
Skill-building programs to help mothers and children during difficult times
can have a long-term positive impact.”
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