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Mediators and Moderators of a School-Based Cognitive-Behavioral Depression Prevention Program. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the effectiveness of a depression prevention program called Positive Thoughts and Actions (PTA) on middle school students, comparing it to an individual support intervention (ISP) over a year.
  • Researchers assessed if factors like ethnic minority status, gender, and baseline depression levels influenced how well PTA worked, finding that ethnic minority status moderated effects more at the 12-month mark, particularly benefiting White participants.
  • Although PTA improved attitudes toward school and health behaviors, these improvements did not explain the reduction in depressive symptoms, suggesting other factors may be involved.

Article Abstract

This study tested potential moderators and mediators of an indicated depression prevention program for middle school students, Positive Thoughts and Actions (PTA). Participants were 120 students randomly assigned to PTA, or a brief, individually administered supportive intervention (Individual Support Program, or ISP). Youths completed measures of depressive symptoms at baseline, post-intervention, and 12-month follow-up. Hierarchical regression was used to test three moderators-ethnic minority status, gender, and baseline depressive symptoms-and three mediators representing functional outcomes targeted by PTA-parent-child communication, attitude towards school, and health behavior. Ethnic minority status did not moderate PTA effects at post-intervention but did moderate PTA effects at 12-month follow-up. At 12 months, PTA appeared to be more effective for White participants than ethnic minority youth. Follow-up analyses suggested this moderation effect was due to the tendency of ethnic minority youth, especially those with fewer symptoms at baseline, to drop out by 12 months. Neither gender nor baseline depressive symptoms moderated the effects of PTA. Although PTA improved health behavior and attitudes toward school, there was no evidence that any of these functional outcomes measured mediated the impact of PTA on depressive symptoms. Future directions are discussed.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5079530PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10608-016-9780-2DOI Listing

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