4.7 Article

PROSPER delivery of universal preventive interventions with young adolescents: long-term effects on emerging adult substance misuse and associated risk behaviors

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE
Volume 47, Issue 13, Pages 2246-2259

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0033291717000691

Keywords

Community-university partnership model; delivery system; emerging adult outcomes; evidence-based intervention; universal preventive intervention.

Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [DA13709]
  2. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism [R01 AA14702]

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Background. Substance misuse and associated health-risking behaviors are prevalent in emerging adulthood. There is a knowledge gap concerning the post-high school effects of community-based delivery systems for universal preventive interventions implemented during young adolescence. This study reports effects of the PROSPER delivery system through age 19, 7.5 years past baseline. Methods. A cohort sequential design included 28 public school districts randomly assigned to the PROSPER partnership delivery system or usual-programming conditions. PROSPER community teams implemented a family-focused intervention in 6th grade and a school-based intervention in 7th grade. Outcomes for the age 19, post-high school report included lifetime, current, and frequency of substance misuse, as well as antisocial and health-risking sexual behaviors. Intent-to-treat, multi-level analyses of covariance of point-in-time outcomes were conducted, along with analyses of risk-related moderation of intervention effects. Results. Results showed emerging adults from PROSPER communities reported significantly lower substance misuse across a range of types of substances, with relative reduction rates of up to 41.0%. No significant findings were observed for associated antisocial and health-risking sexual behavior indices; or for lifetime rates of sexually transmitted infections. Risk-related moderation effects were non-significant, suggesting generally comparable outcomes across higher-and lower-risk subgroups of emerging adults. Conclusions. The PROSPER delivery system for brief universal preventive interventions has potential for public health impact by reducing long-term substance misuse, with positive results extending beyond high school.

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