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1.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 40(4): 618-29, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21722033

ABSTRACT

Anxiety disorders are prevalent in the school-aged population and are present across cultural groups. Scant research exists on culturally relevant prevention and intervention programs for mental health problems in the Aboriginal populations. An established cognitive behavioral program, FRIENDS for Life, was enriched to include content that was culturally relevant to Aboriginal students. Students (N = 533), including 192 students of Aboriginal background, participated in the cluster randomized control study. Data were collected three times over 1 year. A series of multilevel models were conducted to examine the effect of the culturally enriched FRIENDS program on anxiety. These analyses revealed that the FRIENDS program did not effectively reduce anxiety for the total sample or for Aboriginal children specifically. However, all students, regardless of intervention condition, Aboriginal status, or gender, reported a consistent decrease in feelings of anxiety over the 6-month study period.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/prevention & control , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Indians, North American/psychology , Anxiety/ethnology , Canada , Child , Culture , Female , Humans , Indians, North American/ethnology , Male , School Health Services , Sex Factors , Treatment Outcome
2.
Behav Res Ther ; 49(5): 315-23, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21419391

ABSTRACT

The present research examined the effectiveness of a cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) based intervention program, FRIENDS, for children from grades 4 to 6, using random assignment at the school-level and an attention-control design in two longitudinal studies. The first study targeted children with anxiety symptoms (N=191, mean age=10.1) as screened with self, parent, and teacher-reports; the second study took a universal approach with full classrooms of children participating (N=253, mean age=9.8). The results showed no intervention effect in both studies, with children's anxiety symptoms decreasing over time regardless of whether they were in the story-reading (attention control) or FRIENDS condition. The findings also indicated that girls reported a higher level of anxiety than boys and children in higher grades reported lower anxiety relative to younger children in both studies. In addition, similar patterns were found using a subgroup of children with high-anxiety symptoms from both studies.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/prevention & control , Attention , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Anxiety/therapy , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Schools , Social Environment , Treatment Outcome
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