• Preventive medicine · Aug 2023

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    The 3-year effects of a personality-targeted prevention program on general and specific dimensions of psychopathology.

    • Samantha J Lynch, Cath Chapman, Matthew Sunderland, Tim Slade, Maree Teesson, Patricia J Conrod, and Nicola C Newton.
    • The Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health & Substance Use, The University of Sydney, Australia. Electronic address: Samantha.lynch@sydney.edu.au.
    • Prev Med. 2023 Aug 1; 173: 107595107595.

    AbstractThis study aimed to examine the effect of a personality-targeted prevention program (Preventure) on trajectories of general and specific dimensions of psychopathology from early- to mid-adolescence. Australian adolescents (N = 2190) from 26 schools participated in a cluster randomized controlled substance use prevention trial. This study compared schools allocated to deliver Preventure (n = 13 schools; n = 466 students; Mage = 13.42 years), a personality-targeted selective intervention, with a control group (n = 7 schools; n = 235 students, Mage = 13.47 years). All participants were assessed for psychopathology symptoms at baseline, 6-, 12-, 24- and 36-months post-baseline. Outcomes were a general psychopathology factor and four specific factors: fear, distress, alcohol use/harms and conduct/inattention), extracted from a higher-order model. Participants who screened as 'high-risk' on at least one of four personality traits (negative thinking, anxiety sensitivity, impulsivity and sensation seeking) were included in intention-to-treat analyses. Intervention effects were examined using multi-level mixed models accounting for school-level clustering. Among high-risk adolescents, growth in general psychopathology was slower in the Preventure group compared to the control group (b = -0.07, p = 0.038) across the three years. After controlling for effects on general psychopathology, there were no significant, additional effects on the lower order factors. This study provides evidence for the effectiveness of a selective personality-targeted intervention in altering trajectories of general psychopathology during adolescence. This finding represents impacts on multiple symptom domains and highlights the potential for general psychopathology as an intervention target.Copyright © 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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