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Journal Article

Citation

Snyder FJ, Acock AC, Vuchinich S, Beets MW, Washburn IJ, Flay BR. Am. J. Health Promot. 2013; 28(1): 50-58.

Affiliation

Division of Prevention and Community Research, Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut. School of Social and Behavioral Health Science, College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon. Department of Exercise Science, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina. Oregon Social Learning Center, Eugene, Oregon.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, SAGE Publications)

DOI

10.4278/ajhp.120419-QUAN-207.2

PMID

23470183

Abstract

Purpose. Examine the effects of a comprehensive, school-wide social-emotional and character development program using a positive youth development perspective. Specifically, we examined a mediation mechanism whereby positive academic-related behaviors mediated the intervention effects on substance use, violence, and sexual activity. Design. Matched-pair, cluster-randomized, controlled design. Setting. Twenty (10 intervention and 10 control) racially/ethnically diverse schools in Hawaii. Subjects. Elementary-aged students (N = 1784) from grade 5. Intervention. The Positive Action program. Measures. Students self-reported their academic behaviors, together with their substance use, violence, and voluntary sexual activity; teachers rated students' academic behaviors, substance use, and violence. Analysis. Structural equation modeling. Results. Students attending intervention schools reported significantly better academic behavior (B = .273, SE = .039, p < .001) and significantly less substance use (B = -.970, SE = .292, p < .01, incidence-rate ratio [IRR] = .379), violence (B = -1.410, SE = .296, p < .001, IRR = .244), and sexual activity (B = -2.415, SE = .608, p < .001, odds ratio = .089); boys reported more negative behaviors than girls. Intervention effects on student-reported substance use, violence, and sexual activity were mediated by positive academic behavior. Teacher reports corroborated these results, with rated academic behavior partially mediating the effects of the intervention on rated negative behaviors. Conclusion. This study (1) provides evidence that adds insight into one mechanism through which a social-emotional and character development program affects negative outcomes and (2) supports social-emotional and character development and positive youth development perspectives that posit that focusing on youths' assets may reduce negative behaviors.


Language: en

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