4.0 Article

Substance Use Screening and Prevention for Adolescents in Pediatric Primary Care: A Randomized Clinical Trial using the Family Check-Up

Journal

RESEARCH ON CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 2, Pages 151-163

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10802-022-00978-2

Keywords

Screening; Primary care; Family Check-up; Adolescence; Substance use; Indicated prevention

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This study evaluated the acceptability, engagement, and efficacy of a primary care screening and prevention program aiming to reduce substance use in early adolescence. The results showed that the screening tools and prevention measures were well accepted by parents and youths, and families actively engaged in the preventive intervention. The study also found that higher-risk youth benefited more from the prevention measures.
This study evaluated acceptability, engagement in prevention, and efficacy of a primary care screening-and-referral-to-prevention program to reduce substance use in early adolescence. Screening tools were the Youth Risk Index and Transmissible Liability Index and prevention consisted of the Family Check-Up (FCU). Three hundred sixty-one 10- to 13-year-olds from low resource neighborhoods (85.9% African American; 52.4% female) screened at risk during primary care visits and were randomized to the FCU (n = 123) or usual care (n = 238). Screening was acceptable to parents and youths: nearly 95% of each rated it as important, about 90% of each were happy with or did not mind it, and only 2.4% of parents did not want their child to be screened at their next check-up. Of parents who had a chance to receive the FCU (or waitlist-control), 87.5% followed through with researchers while 93.5% who were offered FCU engaged in it. FCU efficacy primarily involved interactions such that youth with greater risk at baseline experienced larger benefits. At 12-month follow-up, FCU was associated with 11% reduced risk of initiating a new substance per substance that had been initiated before baseline; greater reductions in tolerance of deviance among those with higher tolerance of deviance at baseline; and a main effect of reduced anxiety, but no effect for conduct problems. Pediatric well-child check-up screening can identify high-risk youth before, or in the initial stages of, problematic SU; engage families in a preventive intervention; and reduce rates of substance use and related risk factors.

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